Visualizing ideal self vs. actual self through avatars: Impact on preventive health outcomes

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The self-discrepancy between one’s actual self and one’s ideal self, which is associated with negative emotional states (e.g., depression) or unhealthy lifestyles (e.g., eating disorders), is mostly caused and intensified by exposure to unrealistic images of others (e.g., celebrities or magazine models). Drawing from regulatory focus theory, the current study examines whether creating self-resembling avatars, especially those that resemble our ideal selves, could counteract this negative effect of self-discrepancy. The results of a between-subject experiment (N = 95) indicated that user-created self-reflecting avatars made salient different mental images of their bodies based on whether they customized their avatars to look like their actual or ideal selves, and consequently influenced their perceptions toward their physical body through two different self-regulatory systems (i.e., promotion-focused and prevention-focused), with consequences for health outcomes. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

论文关键词:Avatar creation,Desired self-resembling avatar,Actual self-resembling avatar,Self-discrepancy,Regulatory focus theory,Self-preservation

论文评审过程:Available online 21 March 2012.

论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2012.02.021