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Compiled by Liz Dittrich, Ph.D.
A very up-to-date and comprehensive reference list of studies that have investigated media messages and effects.
Listed alphabetically by Author's last name.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
a
Andersen, A. E. & DiDomenico, L. (1992). Diet vs. shape content of popular male and female
magazines: A dose-response relationship to the incidence of eating disorders?
International Journal of Eating Disorders, Volume 11 (3).
Austin, E. W., Roberts, D. F., & Nass, C. I. (1990). Influences of family communication on children's television-interpretation processes. Communication Research, 17 (4), 545-564.
b
Baker, D, Sivyer, R., & Towell, T. (1998). Body image dissatisfaction and eating attitudes in visually impaired women. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 24 (3), 319-322.
Becker, A. E., & Hamburg, P. (1996). Culture, the media, and eating disorders. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 4.
Browne Graves, S. (1993). Television, the portrayal of African Americans, and the development
of children's attitudes. IN: Children & television: Images in a changing sociocultural
world.; Gordon L. Berry, Joy Keiko Asamen, Eds. Sage Publications, Inc, Newbury Park, CA, US. 1993. p. 179-190.
c
Comstock, G. & Strasburger, V. (1990). Deceptive appearances: Television violence and
aggressive behavior. Journal of Adolescent Health Care, v.11, 31-44.
Crouch, Alanda; Degelman, Douglas. Influence of female body images in printed advertising on self-ratings of physical attractiveness by adolescent girls. Perceptual & Motor Skills, 87 (2), 585-586.
Cusumano, D. & Thompson, J. K. (1997). Body image and body shape ideals in magazines:
Exposure, awareness, and internalization. Sex Roles, Vol. 37(9/10).
d
Dietz, Tracy L. (1998). An examination of violence and gender role portrayals in video games:
Implications for gender socialization and aggressive behavior. Sex Roles, v38 (n5-6):425-442.
Dines, G., Jensen, R. & Russo, A. (Eds.) (1998). Pornography : The production and consumption of inequality. New York : Routledge.
Durkin, K. & Nugent, B. (1998). Kindergarten children's gender-role expectations for television
actors. Sex Roles, v38 (5/6), 387-402.
g
Gerbner, George; Gross, Larry; Morgan, Michael; Signorielli, Nancy. Growing up with
television: The cultivation perspective. In: Media effects: Advances in theory and
research. LEA's communication series.; Jennings Bryant, Dolf Zillmann, Eds. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc, Hillsdale, NJ, US. 1994. p. 17-41.
Gilbert, Keith (1998). The body, young children and popular culture (pp. 55-71). IN: Gender in early childhood.; Nicola Yelland, Ed; et al. Routledge, New York, NY, USA.
Grogan, S., Williams, Z., & Conner, M. (1996). The effects of viewing same-gender
photographic models on body-esteem. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 20 (4).
Guillen, E. O., & Barr, S. I. (1994). Nutrition, dieting, and fitness messages in a magazine
for adolescent women, 1970-1990. Journal of Adolescent Health, 15 (6), 464-472.
h
Harrison, K. (1997). Does interpersonal attraction to thin media personalities promote eating disorders? Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 41.
Harrison, K. & Cantor, J. (1997). The relationship between media consumption and eating disorders. Journal of Communication, 47 (1).
Hartung, L. (1997). Disordered eating patterns in relation to gender in the college environment. Journal of the Am Diet Assoc, 97: 9 (Suppl):A-60.
Hearold, S. (1986). A synthesis of 1045 effects of television on social behavior. In: Comstock G., ed. Public communication and behavior. New York: Academic Press.
Heilman, Elizabeth (1998). The struggle for self: Power and identity in adolescent girls. Youth & Society, 30 (2), 182-208.
Heinberg, L. J., & Thompson, J. K. (1995). Body image and televises images of thinness and
attractiveness: A controlled laboratory study. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology,
Volume 14(4).
Henderson-King, E., & Henderson-King, D. (1997). Media effects on women¹s body esteem:
Social and individual difference factors. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 27 (5).
Hoberman, H. (1990). Study group report on the impact of television violence on adolescents.
Journal of Adolescent Health Care, v.11: 45-49.
Huesmann, L. Rowell; Moise, Jessica F.; Podolski, Cheryl-Lynn. The effects of media violence on the development of antisocial behavior (1997). IN: Handbook of antisocial behavior.; David M. Stoff, James Breiling, Jack D. Maser, Eds. John Wiley & Sons, Inc, New York, NY, US. pp. 181-193.
i
Irving, L. M. (1990). Mirror images: Effects of the standard of beauty on the self- and body -
esteem of women exhibiting various levels of bulimic symptoms. Journal of Social and
Clinical Psychology, 9 (2).
k
Kalodner, C. R. (1997). Media influences on male and female non-eating disordered
college students: A significant issue. Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention, 5 (1).
Kilbourne, Jean (1994). Still killing us softly: Advertising and the obsession with thinness.
In Fallon, P., Katzman, M. A., & Wooley, S. C. (Eds.) , Feminist Perspectives on
Eating Disorders (pp. 395-418). New York: The Guilford Press.
Kunkel, D. & Roberts, D. F. (1991). Young minds and marketplace values: Issues in child television advertising. Journal of Social Issues, 47 (1), 57-72.
Kunkel, D., Wilson, B., Donnerstein, E., Linz, D., Smith, S., Gray, T., Blumenthal, E., Potter, W. J. (1995). Measuring television violence: The importance of context. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 39 (2), 284-291.
l
Levine, M. P., & Smolak, L. (1997). Media as a context for the development of disordered
eating. In L. Smolak, M. P. Levine, & R. Striegel-Moore (Eds.), Developmental
Psychopathology of Eating Disorders (pp.235-257). Mahwah, New Jersey: L. Erlbaum Associates.
Lucas, A. R., Beard, C. M., O¹Fallon, W. M., & Kurland, L. T. (1991). 50-year
trends in the incidence of anorexia nervosa in Rochester, Minn.: A population-based study. American Journal of Psychiatry, 148 (7).
m
Millum, T. (1975). Images of women: Advertising in women's magazines. London: Chatto & Windus Ltd.
Murray, S. H., Touyz, S. W., & Beumont, Peter, J. V. (1996). Awareness and perceived
influence of body ideals in the media: A comparison of eating disordered patients and the general community. Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention, 4 (1).
Myers, P.N., Biocca, F.A. (1992). The elastic body image: The effect of television advertising
and programming on body image distortions in young women. Journal of Communication, 42(3).
n
Nemeroff, C. J., Stein, R. I., Diehl, N. S., & Smilack, K.M. (1994). From the Cleavers to the
Clintons: Role choices and body orientation as reflected in magazine article content. International Journal of Eating Disorders, Volume 16 (2).
o
Ogden, J. & Elder, C. (1998). The role of family status and ethnic group on body image and eating behavior. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 23 (3), 309-315.
Ogden, J., & Mundray, K. !996). The effect of the media on body satisfaction: The role of gender and size. European Eating Disorders Review, 4 (3), 171-182.
p
Peirce, K. (1990). A feminist perspective on the socialization of teenage girls through Seventeen magazine.Sex Roles, 23 (9/10), 491-500.
Posavac, H. D., Posavac, S. S., & Posavac, E. J. (1998). Exposure to media images of female
attractiveness and concern with body weight among young women. Sex Roles, Vol. 38 (3/4), 187-201.
r
Rabak-Wagener, J, Eickhoff-Shemek, J., &Kelly-Vance, L. (1998).The effect of media analysis on attitudes and behaviors regarding body image among college students.Journal of American College Health, 47 (1), 29-35.
Remafedi, G. (1990). Study group report on the impact of television portrayals of gender roles
on youth. Journal of Adolescent Health Care, v.11, 59-61.
Roberts, D. F. (1993).Adolescents and the mass media: From „Leave it to Beaver¾ to „Beverly Hills 90210¾. Teachers College Record,94 (3), 629-644.
s
Schlenker, J., Caron, S.L., & Halteman, W.A. (1998). A feminist analysis of Seventeen
magazine: Content analysis from 1945 to 1995. Sex roles, 38(_), 135-149.
Schupak-Neuberg, E., Shaw, H. E., & Stein, R. L. (1994). Relation of media exposure to eating
disorder symptomatology: An examination of mediating mechanisms. Journal of
Abnormal Psychology, Vol. 103 (4).
Signorielli, Nancy; Gerbner, George; Morgan, Michael. Violence on television: The Cultural
Indicators Project. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1995 Spring, v39
(n2):278-283.
Signorielli, Nancy; McLeod, Douglas; Healy, Elaine. Gender stereotypes in MTV commercials:
The beat goes on. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 1994 Winter, v38 (n1):91-101.
Signorielli, Nancy. Television, the portrayal of women, and children's attitudes. IN: Children &
television: Images in a changing sociocultural world.; Gordon L. Berry, Joy Keiko Asamen, Eds. Sage Publications, Inc, Newbury Park, CA, US. 1993. p. 229-242.
Signorielli, Nancy. Children, television, and gender roles: Messages and impact. Conference:
Teens and television (1988, Los Angeles, California). Journal of Adolescent Health Care, 1990 Jan, v11 (n1):50-58.
Signorielli, Nancy. Television and health: Images and impact. IN: Mass communication
and public health: Complexities and conflicts. Sage focus editions, Vol. 121.; Charles
Atkin, Lawrence Wallack, Eds. Sage Publications, Inc, Newbury Park, CA, US. 1990. p. 96-113.
Signorielli, Nancy. Television and conceptions about sex roles: Maintaining conventionality
and the status quo. Sex Roles, 1989 Sep, v21 (n5-6):341-360.
Signorielli, Nancy. Drinking, sex, and violence on television: The Cultural Indicators perspective.
Journal of Drug Education, 1987, v17 (n3):245-260.
Silverstein, B., Perdue, L., Peterson, B., & Kelly, E. (1986). The role of the mass media in
promoting a thin standard of bodily attractiveness for women. Sex Roles, Vol.14 (9/10).
Smith, L. J. (1994). A content analysis of gender differences on children's advertising.
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, v 38 (3), 323-337.
Stice, E., & Shaw, H. E. (1994). Adverse effects of the media portrayed thin-ideal on women and
linkages to bulimic symptomatology. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 13 (3).
Strasburger, Victor C. (1995). Adolescents and the media : Medical and psychological impact /
Victor C. Strasburger. Thousand Oaks : Sage Publications, c1995. Series title:
Developmental clinical psychology and psychiatry ; v. 33.
t
Tiggeman, M., & Pickering, A. S. (1996). Role of television in adolescent women's body
dissatisfaction and drive for thinness. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 20 (2).
Turner, S. L. et al .(1997). The influence of fashion magazines on the body image satisfaction of
college women: An exploratory analysis. Adolescence, Vol. 32 (127).
w
Waller, G. et al. (1994). Beauty is in the eye of the beholder: Media influences on the psychopathology of eating problems. Appetite, 23.
Waller, G., & Hamilton, K., & Shaw, J. (1992). Media influences on body size estimation in eating disordered and comparison subjects. British Review of Bulimia and Anorexia Nervosa, 6 (2).
Williamson, J. (1985).Consuming passions : The dynamics of popular culture.New York : Marion Boyars Publishers.
x
Xiaoming, H. (1994). Television viewing among American adults in the 1990s.Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 38 (3), 353-360.
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