All rights reservedTalbot, DanielSmith, EvelynCass, JohnGriffiths, Scott2025-10-1720192025-05-291524-922010.1037/men0000165https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14802/29440This study aimed to develop and examine the validity evidence of the New Somatomorphic Matrix–Male (NSM-M) as a measure of actual–ideal body discrepancy. The NSM-M is a visual matrix of 34 male bodies that vary along two dimensions: body fat percentage (range = 4–40%) and muscularity (fat-free mass index; range = 16.5–30 kg/m2; 36.4–66.1 lbs/m2). In Study 1, participants were 2,733 sexual minority males recruited via a geosocial networking smartphone application. Participants selected their “actual” and “ideal” bodies on the NSM-M and additionally completed questionnaires measuring body dissatisfaction, eating disorder symptoms, quality of life, and anabolic steroid use. In Study 2, participants were 33 males from a community sample. They completed the NSM-M across two sessions, 7–14 days apart. NSM-M scores demonstrated concurrent and convergent validity as a measure of male body dissatisfaction. In addition, NSM-M scores discriminated between steroid users and nonusers, and between body mass index categories. The NSM-M also demonstrated sound test–retest reliability across a 7- to 14-day period. In sum, the NSM-M is validated figural measure of male actual–ideal body discrepancy with notable strengths, including fast administration time and enhanced ecological validity. (PsycINFO Database Record © 2020 APA, all rights reserved).Development and validation of the new somatomorphic matrix-male : A figural rating scale for measuring male actual-ideal body discrepancyJournal article2-s2.0-85049567468ControlledPUB0201102244