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What Does Pornography Do to Your Brain? - YouTube
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For better or worse, the internet brings people together from distant corners of the world, and has information on every conceivable topic.
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And, of course, that includes porn.
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Thereâs some debate about how much of
the internet is actually pornographic content.
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But if you look for it, youâll find it.
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So how does it affect peopleâs brains,
attitudes, and behaviors?
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The short answer is, itâs complicated, and
thereâs a lot we donât know.
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But we have studied some of the risksâand yes, even possible benefitsâof watching pornography.
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So you know, some of these studies talk about disturbing behaviors like sexual violence and rape.
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Just in case you would like to avoid those things.
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Most research on pornography is correlational.
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There arenât volunteers who get randomly assigned to watch a bunch of explicit videos to see what happens to their brains.
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Instead, lots of studies involve surveys,
asking people about their behaviors and traits, in addition to how much porn they watch.
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On top of that, everyone who participates needs to consent to being in a study about pornography, which might mean some people self-select out of this.
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All that to say: we can't be sure if these findings apply to everyone or even most people, but theyâre a start.
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Some research has found that watching a lot of pornography might reflect differences in people's brains, especially in a part called the striatum.
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The striatum is involved in reward processing, and consistently gets activated during sexual arousalâamong other regions.
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Sexual arousal is a workout for a lot of your brain.
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Two MRI studies tested about 70 male participants
by showing them sexy pictures.
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And the men who felt their pornography use was addictive or problematic had more activity in the ventral striatum compared to those who didnât.
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Another study found that how much porn men watched was negatively correlated with the size of a part of the striatum called the right caudate,
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as well as the connectivity between the striatum and other parts of the brain.
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The researchers of that last study say it's
possible that people who watch a lot of pornography stimulate this reward system a lot, and actually
rewire their brain to need more stimulation.
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But they also note that these brain differences
might not be caused by porn.
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In other words, people with a smaller striatum may need more stimulation to experience pleasure, and seek out more pornography.
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With this kind of correlational research,
you can't really tell which of the two it is.
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Another question that comes up a lot is whether
viewing pornography can be catharticâ
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basically, a safe outlet for certain emotions.
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For instance, psychologists have tried to
study how it affects aggression.
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If you look at the general pattern across the U.S., as pornography has become easier to access over the past few decades, rates of violent crime like rape have gone down.
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And thereâs a similar pattern if you look at when pornography has become widely available in other countries, too.
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But, like we mentioned before, this is just
a correlation and not all studies show this link.
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For example, a 2016 meta-analysis in the Journal of Communication looked at 22 different studies that asked people about their porn viewing and self-reported sexual aggressionâ
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things like using force, verbal harassment, or other threatening behaviors.
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And they found that more porn viewing was related to higher levels of verbal and physical sexual aggression, particularly if the porn had violent content.
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This suggests that behavioral modeling might
be at work:
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that people who see a behavior in othersâeven on a screenâare more likely to do it themselves.
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So psychologists have tried to make sense
of these contradictory data.
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One 2012 study published in the Journal of
Criminal Justice might help shed some light:
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the relationship between porn and aggression
could have to do with timing.
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The researchers asked over 600 adult men who were convicted of sex crimes about their history of watching pornography.
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They found that regularly watching pornography during adolescence was linked with more severe crimes committed as adults, including more
humiliation of their victims,
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so maybe early exposure to aggressive sexual behavior played a part in that.
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And if the convicts had reported viewing porn just before their offense, their crimes were less severe, so catharsis may have been involved.
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But there are also lots of factors that
lead to violent crime.
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So, again, without causal evidence, we don't know if or how pornography is directly linked.
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Plus, the sample sizes of studies like that are relatively small, because most people don't commit violent crimes.
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It's a little easier to measure something like sexism, since anyone can report their attitudes about men and women.
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And do, all the time. It's the internet.
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According to two studies published in the Journal of Sex Research in 2015 and 2017 that looked at the habits of tens of thousands of Americans,
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using pornography is associated with more egalitarian viewsâthings like wanting women in the workplace and in positions of power.
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But the story is different when it comes to rape myths, like the idea that what someoneâs wearing can excuse violence against them.
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Surveys of hundreds of college students have found that men and women who view pornâespecially violent pornâare more likely to believe rape myths.
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Finally, when it comes to your overall well-being, several studies suggest that whether porn is good or bad for you may depend on whether you think it is.
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One study of over 2000 people found that watching porn was linked with an increase in self-reported symptoms of depression.
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But that effect was mainly seen in the 10% who watched despite their moral opposition to it.
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The researchers supposed that those people were distressed by the dissonance between their moral ideals and their actions.
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For those who weren't morally opposed, only the people who watched pornography, like, several times a week or more reported more symptoms of depression.
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And the researchers figured the opposite could be happening here:
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these people may be depressed and using porn to cope.
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So there do seem to be some risks associated with watching a lot of pornography, but it might not be all bad.
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More than anything, we need more research to really know if and how much it affects us.
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Because psychology, and the human brain, and our behavior? It's complicated.
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Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow
Psych!
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If you want to and have the means to support us as we cover these trickier questions about the human mind,
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consider heading over to patreon.com/scishow
and becoming one of our patrons!
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Or if you just want to support us by watching the show that is also wonderfulâyou can go to youtube.com/scishowpsych to subscribe.
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