Do children want skinny friends? The role of 'weight' in children‟s friendship preferences and inter-group attitudes

Authors

  • Sally Palmer
  • Adam Rutland
Keywords: underweight, children, weight bias, trait attribution, body type

Abstract

This study examined developmental attitudes towards underweight stimuli using two different measures. Children aged 5 - 11 firstly attributed positive and negative traits to images of underweight, averageweight and overweight stimuli. A second measure investigated picture preference of the same stimuli for 3 different contexts (Total N=151). The trait attribution task revealed that weight bias overrode gender bias amongst female participants of all ages; girls significantly preferred underweight images to average-weight and overweight images. In the picture preference task, preferences for the underweight stimuli were given by both male and female 5 to 7 year olds, when selecting which stimuli they would have as a 'friend' or to 'take home to play'.

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How to Cite
Palmer, S., & Rutland, A. (2011). Do children want skinny friends? The role of ’weight’ in children‟s friendship preferences and inter-group attitudes. Anales de Psicología / Annals of Psychology, 27(3), 698–707. Retrieved from https://revistas.um.es/analesps/article/view/135301
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Section
Special issue. Prejudice: Sociodevelopmental perspectives. Guest Editors: Silvia Guerrero, Ileana Enesco and Rosa M Pons

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