Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Objectification studies have mostly focused on why and how women are objectified, but relatively little is known about what drives the objectification of men. This paper aims to examine the objectifying gaze toward men, which is operationalized in the present paper as decreased focus on men's faces and increased focus on men's body parts (arms, chest and stomach). We considered the role of appearance (vs. personality) focus and ideal body shape on the objectifying gaze toward men. Specifically, we instructed sixty-five participants (36 men) to either evaluate the appearance or the personality of men while their eyes are monitored. To assess the objectifying gaze, we examined dwell time (i.e., total time spent fixating on an area) on targets' face, arms, chest and stomach as well as first fixation (i.e., how quickly face, arms and stomach were fixated relative to the onset of the image). Consistent with our main hypothesis, results indicated that appearance-focused participants looked at faces less and chests, arms and stomachs for more time than personality-focused participants. Participants also looked at men's arms for more time and at faces for less time for men's bodies with high (vs. average and low) ideal body shape. We discussed these results and their implications in the light of objectification and body perception theories.