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Cosmetic surgery more appealing to those sensitive about appearance

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    “The results of this study suggest that individuals who anxiously expect rejection based on their appearance are vulnerable to the effects of negative comments about their appearance.”

    Lora E. Park
    Assistant Professor of Psychology
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Published: July 3, 2009

Researchers have found that men and women who feel sensitive to rejection based on their physical appearance are more likely to express interest in having cosmetic surgery than those who are less sensitive to appearance-based rejection. This effect is particularly true when people recall negative comments about their physical appearance.

The study, which appeared in the June issue of the journal Body Image, was conducted by Lora E. Park, assistant professor of psychology at UB; Rachel M. Calogero, lecturer in psychology at the University of Kent, and Melissa J. Harwin and Ann Marie DiRaddo, former graduate students in the UB Department of Psychology.

The study examined the role of appearance-based rejection sensitivity—the tendency to anxiously expect rejection based on one’s appearance—among men and women and their interest in cosmetic surgery. A copy of the study is available here.

For the study, a total of 133 American college students were randomly assigned to write an essay about either a negative or positive comment concerning their appearance that they had received in the past. Compared to participants with lower appearance-based rejection sensitivity, those with higher sensitivity felt more rejected and expressed greater interest in getting cosmetic surgery after recalling a negative versus a positive comment about their appearance.

Results were found even after controlling for other individual difference variables, such as overall self-esteem, general rejection sensitivity, the appearance contingency of self-worth scale and self-perceived attractiveness.

Negative appearance comments were most often made in reference to body weight/shape/size, the study participants reported, whereas positive comments about appearance were most often made in reference to one’s overall appearance. Peers/friends/romantic partners were the most frequently cited source of both positive and negative comments concerning appearance.

“The results of this study suggest that individuals who anxiously expect rejection based on their appearance are vulnerable to the effects of negative comments about their appearance,” says Park. “Sensitivity to appearance rejection may therefore be a key psychological variable to consider when examining responses to teasing related to appearance, especially with regard to feeling rejected and expressing interest in cosmetic surgery,” she adds.