Body mass in US adolescents : stronger ties to socioeconomic status than personality

CC BY Logo DOI

It is unclear whether socio- and individual-factors are uniquely related to adolescent BMI or capture the same underlying process or whether environment amplifies relationships between traits and BMI. We estimated the independent contributions of SES and individual factors to BMI percentile in a sample of 9,481 US adolescents. Across all models, SES was significantly associated with lower BMI percentile scores. Controlling for SES, cognitive functioning was associated with lower BMI percentile (Girls: b = -1.32 [-2.10, -0.54], p = .001; Boys: b = -1.84 [-3.10, -0.53], p = .005). Among adolescent girls, Neuroticism (b = 1.75 [0.94, 2.52], p < .001) and related narrow traits, among others, were associated with BMI percentile.​ There were no consistent interactions between SES and personality. In holdout samples, the best performing models included SES, cognitive functioning, and narrow traits. While individual differences may contribute independently to BMI, their contribution is much smaller than that of SES.

Tytuł
Body mass in US adolescents : stronger ties to socioeconomic status than personality
Twórca
Weston Sara
Słowa kluczowe
adolescence; body mass index; obesity; personality traits; socioeconomic status; narrow traits; cognitive functioning
Słowa kluczowe
adolescencja; indeks masy ciała; otyłość; cechy osobowości; status socjoekonomiczny; funkcjonowanie poznawcze
Współtwórca
Leszko Magdalena ORCID 0000-0002-9985-0325
Condon David
Data
2023
Typ zasobu
artykuł
Identyfikator zasobu
DOI 10.5964/ps.7703
Źródło
Personality Science, 2023, vol. 4, [br.s.]., e7703
Język
angielski
Prawa autorskie
CC BY CC BY
Dyscyplina naukowa
Psychologia; Dziedzina nauk społecznych
Kategorie
Publikacje pracowników US
Data udostępnienia24 lip 2023, 10:49:48
Data mod.24 lip 2023, 10:49:48
DostępPubliczny
Aktywnych wyświetleń0