Abstract

AbstractHypnotizability may play a moderating role in the internalization of body image ideals and may also mediate suggested distortion of body image self‐representations, especially in restrained eaters. A modified version of the Creative Imagination Scale (CIS) incorporating a body expansion and a body reduction item, was used to examine the relationship between hypnotizability, dietary restraint and body image manipulation in restrained and non‐restrained eaters. Dietary restraint was measured in 40 female undergraduate participants using the Three‐Factor Eating Questionnaire and the Revised Restraint Scale. The results suggest that hypnotizability, as measured by the CIS, correlates significantly with both measures of dietary restraint. In addition, restrained eaters demonstrated generally elevated susceptibility to body image modification compared with unrestrained eaters, though both restrained and non‐restrained eaters appeared to be more susceptible to imagining body size expansion than reduction. These results are discussed in relation to social influences on eating and dietary disorders. Copyright © 1998 British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis

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