The influence of partner appearance in the assessment of a person with obesity: an experimental study

Eat Weight Disord. 2022 Dec;27(8):3767-3771. doi: 10.1007/s40519-022-01471-x. Epub 2022 Aug 30.

Abstract

Purpose: This study analyzes whether knowing that a male with obesity has a romantic relationship with a normal weight woman improves impressions about him.

Methods: An online experiment was conducted with a sample of 3024 adult participants (1828 women and 1196 men) with a mean age of 36.11 (SD = 13.49). Each participant was shown two photographs: one of a male target with obesity and one of his female partner (who had either normal weight or obesity depending on the condition). The respondents' sex was added as a fixed factor into the analyses. Physical attractiveness was rated using an item with a scale ranging from 0 to 100. Competence, warmth, and morality were measured using a 17-item adjective list.

Results: The target was assessed as more attractive when he had a partner with normal weight (F(1, 3009) = 4.85, p = .028, [Formula: see text] = .002), and was also given higher scores for competence (F(1, 3009) = 4.93, p = .026, [Formula: see text] = .002), warmth (F(1, 3009) = 4.32, p = .038, [Formula: see text] = .001), and morality (F(1, 3009) = 11.16, p = .001, [Formula: see text] = .004). There was a significant interaction between partner weight and the respondents' sex for physical attractiveness, as the difference between the scores in each condition was only significant for women.

Conclusion: It is possible that women perceived that the male target who had a normal weight partner had a higher status or some hidden quality besides his physical appearance, and thus rated him as more attractive.

Level of evidence: Level I, experimental study.

Keywords: Experiment; Obesity; Physical attractiveness; Romantic relationship; Stereotypes.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Attitude*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Obesity*