The impact of body-positive and fitspirational influencers on body satisfaction A longitudinal study of evolving parasocial relationships

Authors
Publication date 04-2026
Journal Human Communication Research
Volume | Issue number 52 | 2
Pages (from-to) 90-105
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
Body-focused influencers are ubiquitous on social media, promoting diverse messages around physical appearances, fitness, and self-acceptance. This longitudinal study investigates how repeated exposure to body-positive, fitspirational, and nonbody-focused influencers shapes users’ parasocial relationship development, wishful identification, appearance-based social comparison, and body satisfaction over a 3-week period. Using a mobile-based experience sampling method, participants were exposed to daily influencer content and completed surveys at four time points (Nt1(Day 1) = 181, Nt2(Day 8) = 155, Nt3(Day 15) = 142, Nt4(Day 22) = 112). Findings show that parasocial relationships developed most strongly with the body-positive influencer, while no significant increase was found for the fitspirational and control conditions. Over time, exposure to body-positive content led to increases in wishful identification and body satisfaction, whereas fitspirational content did not produce significant longitudinal effects. Social comparison intensity was higher in both body-focused conditions compared to the control, but remained stable over time.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary materials.
Language English
Related publication Happier and Healthier? Investigating the Longitudinal Impact of Body-Positive and Fitspirational Influencers on Weight Satisfaction, Healthy Eating, and Physical Activity
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/hcr/hqaf029
Downloads
The impact of body-positive and fitspirational influencers on body satisfaction (Embargo up to 2026-06-06) (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Supplementary materials (Embargo up to 2026-06-06)
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