Abstract
Objectification theory (Fredrickson B. L., & Roberts, T. A. (1997). Psychology of Women Quarterly, 21, 173–206) proposes that body image concerns impair sexual function and satisfaction. The present study was designed to test whether body shame was related to sexual problems and pleasure among heterosexual men and women (N = 320). Using structural equation modeling, we tested whether adult men and women’s body shame was linked to greater sexual problems (lower sexual arousability and ability to reach orgasm) and less pleasure from physical intimacy. Although women were significantly more likely to report appearance concerns than men across sexual and non-sexual contexts, appearance concerns were positively related to both men and women’s sexual problems. The relationship between body shame and sexual pleasure and problems was mediated by sexual self-consciousness during physical intimacy. Men and women’s body shame was related to greater sexual self-consciousness, which in turn predicted lower sexual pleasure and sexual arousability. Results persisted controlling for relationship status and age. Being in a relationship was associated with less sexual self-consciousness and less orgasm difficulty for men and women. Although some paths were significantly stronger for women than for men, results largely supported the proposition that body concerns negatively affect sexual pleasure and promote sexual problems for both men and women. Findings were discussed in terms of objectification theory and the increased cultural emphasis on physical appearance.
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Notes
Participants were asked whether they had ever had sex and, in a subsequent question, participants were asked to define sex. Ninety-four percent of the sample included penile-vaginal intercourse (N = 301) in their definition of sex; 6% indicated oral sex and other acts of physical and emotional intimacy between sexual partners (N = 18). Thus, we can be confident that the majority of our sample had previously experienced penile-vaginal intercourse.
For the structural equations analysis, we randomly divided the scale into two indicators that were created by averaging half the items, a procedure commonly referred to as parceling. Parceling improves the goodness of fit and reduces bias in estimations of structural parameters in comparison to individual item use (Bandalos, 2002).
Prior to testing the structural equation models, variance inflation factors (VIF) were examined in multiple regression equations with the observed variables. As a rule of thumb, VIF should not exceed 5.0 (Stine, 1995). Our VIF factors fell in the range of 1.0–1.69, which suggests that multicollinearity was not an issue in these data.
Structural equation modeling must satisfy four conditions: (1) specification (determining the indicators for latent variables and causal paths between latent variables); (2) identification (determining whether there was adequate information to estimate the model); (3) estimation (testing the paths via structural equation modeling); and (4) model evaluation (see Kenny, Kashy, & Bolger, 1998). To determine identification, we first scaled the latent variables. Then, in accordance with Kenny et al. (1998), we fixed one indicator per latent variable. Because we had two indicators per construct, we confirmed that the indicators’ errors were uncorrelated and that the indicators of the construct correlated with a separate indicator of another construct, while their errors were uncorrelated.
Controlling for socially desirable responding using the Marlowe-Crown social desirability scale did not alter the results.
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Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Barbara Fredrickson, Adam Grant, Carrie Langner, Jana Haritatos, Sonya Brady, and Lora Park for their helpful comments on this article. We are also deeply indebted to Amiram Vinokur for his statistical assistance. Amy Kiefer was funded by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship and a National Institutes of Mental Health Postdoctoral Fellowship during the preparation of this article.
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Sanchez, D.T., Kiefer, A.K. Body Concerns In and Out of the Bedroom: Implications for Sexual Pleasure and Problems. Arch Sex Behav 36, 808–820 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-007-9205-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-007-9205-0