The Body Image Drawing Tool & The Interview / Sept. 2020

What do you think of your body? How did your views affect you? What kind of person are you internally? If you can change your body at will, and let your personality, emotions, and qualities you value externalize into your physical appearance, what are the possibilities of your body?

The theory of “self objectification” of “body image” holds that when people (more shown on the females) observe their bodies, they tend to internalize a “imaginary third person perspective”, which makes us pay more attention to physical characteristics when considering our body, rather than our subjective feelings as subjects. Based on this understanding, I designed an interview (including a tool for drawing subjective “body images”) to help people reflect on their relationship with their bodies, and through a series of “imagination” questions, to guide people’s attention from “how do I look?” to “how do I feel?”

Body Image Research / Aug.- Sept. 2020

Analysis and comparison of the existing body image measurement methods

Introduction:

Body image refers to the individual’s cognition and evaluation of his body. It is the earliest part of individual self-consciousness and an important basic part of self-identity. It involves the individual’s view and evaluation of his appearance, physique and physical fitness. It is multi-dimensional and multi-level, and shows different characteristics with the growth of individual age. At the same time, body image is influenced by social culture and the evaluation of important others.

In psychology, medicine, philosophy, feminism and other disciplines, there are different theoretical analysis of body image, and explore the important elements that affect people’s body image. At present, important theories include social comparison theory (Festinger, 1954), social culture theory (Thompson, 1999), objectification theory (Fredrickson & Roberts, 1997), symbolic interaction theory (Mead, 1934). There are many measuring tools and methods about how to test people’s body image. These related theories and methods, as well as extended related concepts, provide insights for my next step of design, and helped me to generate my own “body image measurement tool” and possible design directions in the next step.

How I turned these theories into design inspirations: