Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Outline and Evaluate attitudes to
eating behaviour
- Cultural Differences
- Ethnicity
- Striegel-moore et al -
Found evidence of
'drive for thinness'
among black girls
- Munford et al - Incident of
bulimia greater amongst asian
school girls
- Social Class
- Dornbusch et al -
Higher class females
equals greater desire
to eb thin and more
likely to diet
- Story et al - Study on American
Students, higher social class was
related to greater satisfaction
with weight and lower rates of
weight control and behaviour
(like vomiting)
- Social Learning
- Media Effects
- MacIntyre et al - Media has a
major impact both on what
people eat and attitudes to
foods
- Parental Modelling
- Meyer + Gast - Significant
positive correlation on peer
influence + disordered
eating
- Birch + Fisher - Best
predictors of daughter's
eating behaviour is
mother's dietary restrain
- Mood and Eating
- Comfort and eating
- Parker at al -
Chocolate has
antidepressant
effect for some but
is likely to prolong
negative mood if
repeated intake
- Garg et al - People who feel
sad want to 'jolt themselves
out of dumps' therefore are
more likely to snack
- Binge eating
- Studies support a drop in
mood after eating
- Gender Bias - Siever -Only studies made on
women's attitudes to eating but
homosexuality is a risk factor in
development of disordered eating attitudes
- Reductionist - Oversimplifies a
complex process. Focuses on
environment and ignores
biological factors e.g evolutionary
- Generalisation - Studies
come from variety of
groups. Some clinical other
sub-clinical and non-clinical.
Limits on degree to which
we can generalise studies
therefore
- Rozin et al - Food
functions differently
in the minds and lives
of people from
different cultures