<p>Height is a socially visible and psychologically salient characteristic, often linked to perceptions of attractiveness, dominance, and status. Despite its immutability in adulthood, height can become a source of dissatisfaction when individuals feel misaligned with internalized ideals. Our study examined height dissatisfaction using a novel visual tool, the Height Figural Rating Scale, in a sample of 328 Australian adults. We assessed actual height, height preference relative to a self-reference figure, and height dissatisfaction, and explored gender differences in these perceptions. Consistent with prior research, men overwhelmingly wished to be taller and those with this discrepancy reported significantly greater dissatisfaction than men content with their height. In contrast, women displayed a bi-directional pattern: shorter women wanted to be taller, while taller women expressed a desire to be shorter, with both groups reporting elevated dissatisfaction. These findings underscore that height concerns affect both genders, though in qualitatively different ways. Our results highlight the psychological significance of height in body image and challenge the assumption that height concerns are primarily male issues. Interventions targeting body dissatisfaction should consider height as a meaningful, often overlooked, dimension of self-evaluation.</p>

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Too Tall, Too Short: Gendered Height Ideals and the Bi-directionality of Height Dissatisfaction in Australian Adults

  • Daniel Talbot,
  • Justin Mahlberg

摘要

Height is a socially visible and psychologically salient characteristic, often linked to perceptions of attractiveness, dominance, and status. Despite its immutability in adulthood, height can become a source of dissatisfaction when individuals feel misaligned with internalized ideals. Our study examined height dissatisfaction using a novel visual tool, the Height Figural Rating Scale, in a sample of 328 Australian adults. We assessed actual height, height preference relative to a self-reference figure, and height dissatisfaction, and explored gender differences in these perceptions. Consistent with prior research, men overwhelmingly wished to be taller and those with this discrepancy reported significantly greater dissatisfaction than men content with their height. In contrast, women displayed a bi-directional pattern: shorter women wanted to be taller, while taller women expressed a desire to be shorter, with both groups reporting elevated dissatisfaction. These findings underscore that height concerns affect both genders, though in qualitatively different ways. Our results highlight the psychological significance of height in body image and challenge the assumption that height concerns are primarily male issues. Interventions targeting body dissatisfaction should consider height as a meaningful, often overlooked, dimension of self-evaluation.