Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes

Abstract The present cross-sectional study is the first to investigate the relationship between implicit and explicit attitudes toward different body sizes in female athletes of different sport types. Second, it was examined if these attitudes are, among other factors, related to body satisfaction i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Petra Jansen, Jelena Haugg, Franziska Anna Schroter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-03-01
Series:BMC Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02567-6
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849774648281006080
author Petra Jansen
Jelena Haugg
Franziska Anna Schroter
author_facet Petra Jansen
Jelena Haugg
Franziska Anna Schroter
author_sort Petra Jansen
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The present cross-sectional study is the first to investigate the relationship between implicit and explicit attitudes toward different body sizes in female athletes of different sport types. Second, it was examined if these attitudes are, among other factors, related to body satisfaction in these women. In total, 146 female athletes between 18 and 65 from lean and non-lean sports participated in the study, measuring explicit and implicit affective attitudes using pictures of women with different body sizes. Eating disorder risk, the assessment of the image of the own body, and self-compassion were also asked. Results showed that female athletes had more positive explicit affective attitudes towards pictures of individuals whose body sizes correspond to lower body mass indices ranges than higher ones. No differences were found for implicit attitudes. Affective explicit and implicit attitudes for different body sizes showed no significant difference between lean and non-lean sports athletes. Explicit and implicit attitudes did not predict body image satisfaction, but the actual weight-ideal discrepancy, self-compassion, and risk of eating disorders did. Due to the high relevance of body image satisfaction for society and health, future studies should address the aspects of self-compassion and the risk of eating disorders in more detail.
format Article
id doaj-art-f04bd336710a4f32b7d0d4e3454a90cf
institution DOAJ
issn 2050-7283
language English
publishDate 2025-03-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Psychology
spelling doaj-art-f04bd336710a4f32b7d0d4e3454a90cf2025-08-20T03:01:38ZengBMCBMC Psychology2050-72832025-03-0113111310.1186/s40359-025-02567-6Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizesPetra Jansen0Jelena Haugg1Franziska Anna Schroter2Faculty of Human Science, University of RegensburgFaculty of Human Science, University of RegensburgFaculty of Human Science, University of RegensburgAbstract The present cross-sectional study is the first to investigate the relationship between implicit and explicit attitudes toward different body sizes in female athletes of different sport types. Second, it was examined if these attitudes are, among other factors, related to body satisfaction in these women. In total, 146 female athletes between 18 and 65 from lean and non-lean sports participated in the study, measuring explicit and implicit affective attitudes using pictures of women with different body sizes. Eating disorder risk, the assessment of the image of the own body, and self-compassion were also asked. Results showed that female athletes had more positive explicit affective attitudes towards pictures of individuals whose body sizes correspond to lower body mass indices ranges than higher ones. No differences were found for implicit attitudes. Affective explicit and implicit attitudes for different body sizes showed no significant difference between lean and non-lean sports athletes. Explicit and implicit attitudes did not predict body image satisfaction, but the actual weight-ideal discrepancy, self-compassion, and risk of eating disorders did. Due to the high relevance of body image satisfaction for society and health, future studies should address the aspects of self-compassion and the risk of eating disorders in more detail.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02567-6Body imageFemale athletesLean and non-lean sportsExplicit and implicit attitudes
spellingShingle Petra Jansen
Jelena Haugg
Franziska Anna Schroter
Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
BMC Psychology
Body image
Female athletes
Lean and non-lean sports
Explicit and implicit attitudes
title Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
title_full Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
title_fullStr Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
title_full_unstemmed Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
title_short Explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
title_sort explicit and implicit affective attitudes of female athletes towards different body sizes
topic Body image
Female athletes
Lean and non-lean sports
Explicit and implicit attitudes
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02567-6
work_keys_str_mv AT petrajansen explicitandimplicitaffectiveattitudesoffemaleathletestowardsdifferentbodysizes
AT jelenahaugg explicitandimplicitaffectiveattitudesoffemaleathletestowardsdifferentbodysizes
AT franziskaannaschroter explicitandimplicitaffectiveattitudesoffemaleathletestowardsdifferentbodysizes