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Prof. Dr. Gabriela Topa
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Home > Archives > Vol. 10 No. 4 (2025): Published > Research Articles
ESP-3657

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2025-04-26

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Vol. 10 No. 4 (2025): Published

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Research Articles

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Copyright (c) 2025 Zhishu Lin, Siti Aishah binti Hj Mohammad Razi, LingYann Wong, Chenwei Ma

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How to Cite

Lin, Z., Hj Mohammad Razi, S. A. binti, Wong, L., & Ma, C. (2025). Redefining beauty: A critical analysis of social media representations of women’s fitness and mental health. Environment and Social Psychology, 10(4), ESP-3657. https://doi.org/10.59429/esp.v10i4.3657
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Redefining beauty: A critical analysis of social media representations of women’s fitness and mental health

Zhishu Lin

Faculty of modern language and communication, University Putra Malaysia, Serdang, 43400, Malaysia

Siti Aishah binti Hj Mohammad Razi

Faculty of modern language and communication, University Putra Malaysia, Serdang, 43400, Malaysia

LingYann Wong

Faculty of modern language and communication, University Putra Malaysia, Serdang, 43400, Malaysia

Chenwei Ma

Faculty of modern language and communication, University Putra Malaysia, Serdang, 43400, Malaysia


DOI: https://doi.org/10.59429/esp.v10i4.3657


Keywords: social media; fitness culture; mental health; algorithmic bias; feminist theory; body image


Abstract

The research investigates how fitness content on Instagram and TikTok supports the maintenance of discriminatory beauty standards that produce psychological effects on women. The evidence shows that algorithmically boosted fitness ideals lead to worsening mental health risks for marginalized groups, which provides the basis for the investigation. The study aims to achieve five essential targets that include examining fitness trend narratives alongside algorithmic bias assessment and evaluating body inclusion trends as well as establishing mental health-linked digital exposure relationships and establishing feminist health metrics. As part of this research project a fusion of methods combined Feminist Critical Discourse Analysis (FCDA) with sentiment modeling and Ad Observer to analyze 1,000 posts labeled with #Fitspiration and #BodyPositivity throughout 2020–2023. The combination of public health data, which included mental health indicators alongside helpline statistics, allowed researchers to conduct statistical analyses. Fitness content primarily displays lean/muscular body types at 78% yet disabled and plus-size body types are shown less than 6% of the time. The statistical relationship between Fitspiration posts and eating disorder cases showed a strong correlation value of r = 0.76 that peaked at r = 0.82 on Instagram. The algorithms detected 70% of inclusive content while simultaneously providing more benefits to problematic posts resulting in elevated financial profits alongside increased toxicity levels. Platform design parameters drive the continued propagation of body image problems according to research so scientists propose solutions featuring algorithm assessment combined with economic reform and content policy diversity to safeguard user mental health and fair representation.


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