‘Children perceive thinner people as happier and more attractive’ | Sunday Observer

‘Children perceive thinner people as happier and more attractive’

11 September, 2022

Children as young as five perceive thinner people as happier and more attractive than overweight people, a study has revealed.

Researchers from the University of Gdańsk showed preschool boys and girls images of men and women with various body types, and asked them to rate who was the most attractive and happiest.

The results revealed that for male and female bodies, the children rated the obese bodies as the least attractive and least happy.

‘Preschoolers can identify physically attractive persons, and they might already form attributions regarding the looks of adults (especially women), which in turn may constitute a foundation for their future concept of beauty-related happiness,’ the researchers wrote in their study.

Thin dolls like Barbie can make children as young as five want a slimmer body, a study said.

Realistic body weight

UK scientists asked girls between the ages of five and nine to play with two ultra-thin dolls, including Barbie, and two dolls portraying a more realistic body weight.

The two ultra-thin dolls, both made by American toy giant Mattel, immediately reduced the girls’ ideal body size, the researchers found.

Meanwhile, the two realistic dolls – Dora and Lottie – seemed to have no effects on body dissatisfaction. Thin dolls, combined with exposure to ‘thin ideals’ in films, on TV and social media, could lead to body dissatisfaction in young girls, which has been shown to be a factor in the development of eating disorders.

Researchers used two types of dolls in the study - ultra-thin (left) and realistic (right). Ultra-thin dolls reduced the girls’ ideal body size straight after they played with them, the experts found.

Obesity and happiness

In the study, the team set out to understand the relationship between associations of obesity and happiness made by five-year-old children.

‘Currently, the media creates the standards for perfect bodies: slim for women, muscular for men,’ the researchers said in their study, published in BMC Paediatrics. ‘These standards are then internalised by both sexes already in their childhood as aspirations determining broadly understood happiness.

‘Children with average or muscular builds are perceived as happy, kind, strong, neat, and popular. ‘Overweight children, at least in the Western world, are assessed as being clumsy, lazy, stupid, and more likely to cheat.

‘In our study, we shed light on the relationship between associations of obesity and happiness made by preschool girls and boys (5-year-olds).’

The team enlisted 329 five-year-old girls and 351 five-year-old boys, who were shown a chart with three types of adult male and female silhouettes – slim, normal, and overweight.

The children were asked six questions and asked to point to the silhouette for their answer.

The questions included ‘Which woman is the prettiest/which man is the most handsome?’, ‘Which woman/man has the most friends?’, ‘which woman/man is the happiest?’ and ‘which woman/man is the smartest?’

Slim bodies

The results revealed that for female and male silhouettes, girls and boys were least likely to indicate the obese bodies as most attractive, while slim bodies and normal bodies were rated as equally attractive.

Girls assessed slim and normal weight persons as similarly happy, while boys assessed the slimmest women as happiest.

‘The results clearly suggest that children associate looks with happiness, indicating that the body type assessed as the most physically attractive corresponded to the consistent selection of the same body type in questions regarding happiness,’ the researchers wrote.

- Daily Mail.uk

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