Study: Porn may not be such a bad influence on sexual behaviour afterall

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Studies have linked porn consumption to sexual aggression, problems with  intimate relationships and losing one’s virginity at an earlier age. But the  influence of sexually explicit material on some risky behaviours may be more  modest than previously thought.

In a new study from the Journal of Sexual Medicine, four Dutch researchers  argue that previous studies on the subject have been too narrowly focused when  it comes to drawing a connection between X-rated materials and negative  outcomes. Such research has often asked some form of the same question: whether  what people see will affect what people do—and the results didn’t paint porn in  a flattering light. The latest study found that the connection may be less  significant than other studies have suggested, though the work still provided  plenty of support for the anti-pornography contingent.

University of Copenhagen’s Gert Martin Hald and colleagues conducted an  online survey of 4,600 young people asking about a broad range of sex acts, from  threesomes to experience with one-night stands to prostitution. They found that  among the 15-to-25-year-olds participants, almost 90% of males and nearly half  of females reported that they had used porn some time in the previous year, the  vast majority of which was online. And there is some evidence that widespread  access to the Internet, with its triple-x domains, may be pushing exposure up.  In 1973, for example, a study found that 84% of men and 69% of adult women had  seen pornography, the majority before the age of 21. Thirty-five years later, a  2008 survey in CyberPsychology and Behaviour revealed that 93% of boys and  62% of girls had encountered dirty materials online before they hit age 18.

Heightened exposure, Hald found, was associated with high-risk sexual  practices like accepting some kind of payment for sex. He and his team also tied  porn usage to “adventurous” behaviours, such as having “real-life sex” with  someone they met online, which some experts believe may lead to increased rates of sexually transmitted  diseases.

But the researchers emphasize that the tie between porn and risky business  isn’t absolute or clear-cut. For example, there may be other contributors to the  promiscuous behaviour, such as a tendency toward thrill-seeking (which, in turn,  could make young people more likely to experiment with porn). Pornography is  “just one factor among many that may influence the sexual behaviours of young  people,” they concluded, while cautioning that the findings “should not be  interpreted as an indication that the influence … is negligible, nonexistent, or  unimportant.”

The results should inform educators and policy makers who may turn too  quickly to the ubiquity of sexually explicit material as the primary culprit for  society’s attitudes toward sex. Expanding the list of potential contributors  could lead to more effective ways of curbing perilous behaviour, such as  addressing the thrill-seeking that turns sexual encounters solely into  opportunities for attaining physical pleasure or engaging in “sexual  exploration.” A 2008 study, for example, showed that self-control and planning  ahead helped gay men to avoid careless behaviour that could put their health at  risk.

There is also the fact that public tolerance of sexually explicit material is  increasing. A 2011 Gallup poll found a growing generational divide when it came  to pornography: only 19% of people 55 and older said it was morally acceptable,  compared to more than 40% of people ages 18 to 34. If opposing porn continues to  lose popular support among young people, that’s one more reason to explore other  avenues for promoting safe sexual practices.

Read more: Time

 

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