Publikation: The implicit nature of the anti-fat bias
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The stigmatization and discrimination of obese persons is pervasive in almost any domain of living. At the explicit level, obese people are associated with a wide range of negative characteristics. Furthermore, research with the implicit association test revealed the implicit nature of the anti-fat bias. Building upon these findings, the present study used event-related brain potential recordings in order to assess key features of implicit processes. Participants viewed a series of schematic portrayals of anorexic, medium, and obese body shapes and tools. In a passive viewing condition, participants were asked to simply look at the stimuli and, in a distraction condition, participants were asked to detect a specific tool. Viewing obese body images, as compared to medium or anorexic body images, elicited a positive potential shift over fronto-central sites and a relative negative potential over occipito-temporal regions in a time window from approximately 190 to 250 ms. This evaluative brain response to obese body images was similarly pronounced while participants performed a distraction task. Thus, the findings suggest that the anti-fat bias may occur spontaneously, unintentionally, and independent of explicit processing goals. A troublesome picture is emerging in Western cultures suggesting that obese-ism may appear to be as inevitable as a reflex.
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SCHUPP, Harald T., Britta RENNER, 2011. The implicit nature of the anti-fat bias. In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 2011, 5, 23. eISSN 1662-5161. Available under: doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2011.00023BibTex
@article{Schupp2011impli-12418, year={2011}, doi={10.3389/fnhum.2011.00023}, title={The implicit nature of the anti-fat bias}, volume={5}, journal={Frontiers in Human Neuroscience}, author={Schupp, Harald T. and Renner, Britta}, note={Article Number: 23} }
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