Factor Analysis and Psychometric Properties of the Chinese Translation of the Acceptance of Cosmetic Surgery Scale

Autor: Jessica M. Alleva, Yi Wu, Sandra Mulkens
Přispěvatelé: RS: FPN CPS II, Section Eating Disorders and Obesity, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Adult
Male
050103 clinical psychology
medicine.medical_specialty
China
Health Knowledge
Attitudes
Practice

Social Psychology
Psychometrics
media_common.quotation_subject
BREAST AUGMENTATION
SELF-ESTEEM
BEAUTY ECONOMY
050109 social psychology
Cronbach's alpha
BODY APPRECIATION SCALE-2
medicine
Cross-cultural
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Surgery
Plastic

General Psychology
Applied Psychology
media_common
Acceptance of Cosmetic Surgery Scale
OBJECTIFICATION THEORY
PSYCHOSOCIAL CHARACTERISTICS
05 social sciences
Self-esteem
Construct validity
Reproducibility of Results
ITALIAN VERSION
Mental health
Exploratory factor analysis
Surgery
Psychometric properties
Body image
Convergent validity
Scale (social sciences)
Female
Factor analysis
Chinese population
SOCIOCULTURAL ATTITUDES
Psychology
Factor Analysis
Statistical

MENTAL-HEALTH
COLLEGE WOMENS ATTITUDES
Zdroj: Body Image, 33, 244-256. Elsevier BV
ISSN: 1740-1445
Popis: This paper describes a Chinese translation and validation of the Acceptance of Cosmetic Surgery Scale (ACSS; Henderson-King & Henderson-King, 2005), a questionnaire for assessing attitudes towards cosmetic surgery. Chinese adults (335 women, 240 men; Mage = 33.65) completed the Chinese ACSS and - to investigate construct validity - measures of body appreciation, facial appearance concerns, sociocultural attitudes towards appearance (i.e., internalization of appearance ideals and appearance pressures), and demographics. Exploratory factor analysis revealed that the Chinese ACSS comprised two factors, which were invariant across sex, mirroring results among other non-Western samples. The Chinese ACSS also demonstrated good internal consistency (Cronbach's alphas > .90) and convergent validity via its positive associations with facial appearance concerns and overall sociocultural attitudes toward appearance. Chinese ACSS scores were higher among women, and were positively correlated with age among men. Chinese ACSS scores were not associated with body appreciation or other demographic factors. The ACSS seems to be a valid instrument for use in Chinese adults, and could bring more insight into attitudes toward cosmetic surgery from a cross-cultural perspective.
Databáze: OpenAIRE