Anorexia Nervosa has been recently recognized as one of the most common chronic illnesses that affects the female adolescent population today. Although there has been an abundance of research into eating disorders in a variety of fields, significant limitations within the research still exist. Since very early descriptions of the disorder, self-concept and body image have been identified as core components of the anorexia nervosa. However, research has been somewhat limited in that there have not been any consistent theoretical underpinnings for self-concept and body image within the eating disorders field. Furthermore, researchers have tended to adopt traditional inferential statistics and multivariate methods to assess the role of self-concept and body image. As a result there has been very little consistency in research results. The current paper summarizes the significant findings from a doctoral thesis that attempted to address current limitations in self-concept and body image literature within the field of eating disorders.
History
Pagination
1 - 11
Location
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Open access
Yes
Start date
2006-07-23
End date
2006-07-26
ISBN-10
1741080738
Language
eng
Notes
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Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2006, SELF Research Centre
Editor/Contributor(s)
R Craven, J Eccles, M Ha
Title of proceedings
SELF 2006 : Self-concept, motivation, social and personal identity for the 21st century : Proceedings of the 4th International Biennial SELF research conference