Abstract

Objective This study investigated the role of self-presentation motivation across three groups with known differences in disordered eating behavior. Methods Female participants ( N = 131) were currently in-treatment for an eating disorder ( n = 39), deemed at-risk ( n = 46), or not-at-risk for an eating disorder ( n = 46). All participants completed general and physique-specific measures of self-presentation motivation. Results Results revealed significant moderate differences between groups. Those not-at-risk reported lower levels of self-presentation motivation across all measures compared to those in the other groups. Those at-risk reported significantly lower scores across global measures of self-presentation motivation, but not physique-specific motives, than those in-treatment. A discriminant function analysis demonstrated that self-presentation motivation correctly classified 63.4% of cases. Discussion Results suggest that self-presentation motives may be particularly salient for individuals at-risk or in-treatment for eating disordered behavior.

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