Decades of studies from respected academic institutions, have demonstrated significant impacts of porn consumption for individuals, relationships, and society. "What’s the Research" aims to shed light on the expanding field of academic resources that showcase porn’s harms in a variety of ways. Below are selected excerpts from published studies on this issue.
The full study can be accessed here.
Exploring Trajectories of Pornography Use Through Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood
Authors: Brian J. Willoughby, Bonnie Young-Petersen, and Nathan D. Leonhardt
Published: October 2017
Peer-Reviewed Journal: The Journal of Sex Research 55(3) (2018) 297–309
Background
Sexuality research focused on pornography use has expanded greatly in the past two decades. With the advent of widely available sexually explicit material online, pornography use has now become both normative and widespread across most parts of the modern world. Scholarly estimates suggest that between 50% and 70% of adult men use pornography on a regular basis.
Pornography use is also common among younger demographics, with adolescent lifetime use being reported at higher than 80%. This increased utilization of pornographic content, often defined as media produced with the intent of eliciting sexual arousal within the user, has intensified scholarly and public interest in pornography.
Among the largest of these gaps is the lack of studies that have explored pornography use as a dynamic behavior, rather than a static factor that does not change over time. Most published studies of pornography have measured pornography use with a single indicator and at a single time point of use. Scholars of such studies have also largely discussed such use as static. Implicitly, such scholarship has suggested that one either is or is not a pornography user. Such thinking is problematic in that pornography use, like any behavior, likely fluctuates and changes over the life course.
By extension, scholars have mainly focused on whether static pornography use is associated with adult and adolescent well-being. Such thinking ignores the possibility that, in addition to pornography use being related to behaviors and mental health at one point in time or even across two waves of a single study, the pattern of pornography use over the life course may also be of interest and related to variations in psychological and behavioral patterns beyond current use.
Furthermore, despite the likelihood that pornography use may change across the life course, no evidence exists regarding whether this is, in fact, true or what common changes or trajectories exist. This lack of information on potential use trajectories severely limits the ability of scholars to holistically understand and explore pornography use across the life course.
To address this gap, we used a retrospective measurement design of a large sample of adults collected from the United States and assessed patterns of pornography use through adolescence and emerging adulthood. We explored whether common patterns of trajectories exist and if such trajectories are then associated with a range of psychological and behavioral indicators, including depression, life satisfaction, sexual behavior, dating behavior, and current pornography use.
Methods
Using a sample of 908 adults from the United States, retrospective data on pornography use through adolescence and emerging adulthood were gathered to explore trajectories of pornography use across these developmental periods.
Results
Latent mixture models suggested the presence of common patterns of use across both developmental periods.
Adolescence patterns appeared to largely be distinguished by those who either engaged or did not engage with pornography, while emerging adulthood data revealed the presence of a group of experimenters who engaged in pornography through adolescence but then decreased use through their 20′s.
Men were found to be more likely to have consistent profiles of pornography use, while single adults were likely to have delayed entry into pornography use.
Associations with adult mental health and pornography use were found, suggesting that early exposure to pornography was related to elevated current pornography use patterns and dysfunctional pornography use.
Trajectories also had an association with life satisfaction, with individuals reporting trajectories involving consistent pornography use reporting lower life satisfaction after controls.
The full study can be accessed here.
Your Support Matters Now More Than Ever
Most kids today are exposed to porn by the age of 12. By the time they’re teenagers, 75% of boys and 70% of girls have already viewed itRobb, M.B., & Mann, S. (2023). Teens and pornography. San Francisco, CA: Common Sense.Copy —often before they’ve had a single healthy conversation about it.
Even more concerning: over half of boys and nearly 40% of girls believe porn is a realistic depiction of sexMartellozzo, E., Monaghan, A., Adler, J. R., Davidson, J., Leyva, R., & Horvath, M. A. H. (2016). “I wasn’t sure it was normal to watch it”: A quantitative and qualitative examination of the impact of online pornography on the values, attitudes, beliefs and behaviours of children and young people. Middlesex University, NSPCC, & Office of the Children’s Commissioner.Copy . And among teens who have seen porn, more than 79% of teens use it to learn how to have sexRobb, M.B., & Mann, S. (2023). Teens and pornography. San Francisco, CA: Common Sense.Copy . That means millions of young people are getting sex ed from violent, degrading content, which becomes their baseline understanding of intimacy. Out of the most popular porn, 33%-88% of videos contain physical aggression and nonconsensual violence-related themesFritz, N., Malic, V., Paul, B., & Zhou, Y. (2020). A descriptive analysis of the types, targets, and relative frequency of aggression in mainstream pornography. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 49(8), 3041-3053. doi:10.1007/s10508-020-01773-0Copy Bridges et al., 2010, “Aggression and Sexual Behavior in Best-Selling Pornography Videos: A Content Analysis,” Violence Against Women.Copy .
From increasing rates of loneliness, depression, and self-doubt, to distorted views of sex, reduced relationship satisfaction, and riskier sexual behavior among teens, porn is impacting individuals, relationships, and society worldwideFight the New Drug. (2024, May). Get the Facts (Series of web articles). Fight the New Drug.Copy .
This is why Fight the New Drug exists—but we can’t do it without you.
Your donation directly fuels the creation of new educational resources, including our awareness-raising videos, podcasts, research-driven articles, engaging school presentations, and digital tools that reach youth where they are: online and in school. It equips individuals, parents, educators, and youth with trustworthy resources to start the conversation.
Will you join us? We’re grateful for whatever you can give—but a recurring donation makes the biggest difference. Every dollar directly supports our vital work, and every individual we reach decreases sexual exploitation. Let’s fight for real love: