Abstract

Increased pornography use has been a feature of contemporary human society, with technological advances allowing for high speed internet and relative ease of access via a multitude of wireless devices. Does increased pornography exposure alter general emotion processing? Research in the area of pornography use is heavily reliant on conscious self-report measures. However, increasing knowledge indicates that attitudes and emotions are extensively processed on a non-conscious level prior to conscious appraisal. Hence, this exploratory study aimed to investigate whether frequency of pornography use has an impact on non-conscious and/or conscious emotion processes. Participants (N = 52) who reported viewing various amounts of pornography were presented with emotion inducing images. Brain Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) were recorded and Startle Reflex Modulation (SRM) was applied to determine non-conscious emotion processes. Explicit valence and arousal ratings for each image presented were also taken to determine conscious emotion effects. Conscious explicit ratings revealed significant differences with respect to “Erotic” and “Pleasant” valence (pleasantness) ratings depending on pornography use. SRM showed effects approaching significance and ERPs showed changes in frontal and parietal regions of the brain in relation to “Unpleasant” and “Violent” emotion picture categories, which did not correlate with differences seen in the explicit ratings. Findings suggest that increased pornography use appears to have an influence on the brain’s non-conscious responses to emotion-inducing stimuli which was not shown by explicit self-report.

Highlights

  • The present study aims to use neurophysiological measures (EEG and Startle Reflex Modulation (SRM)) to determine whether varying amounts of pornography consumption within the normal population has any effect on non-conscious emotional states as well as conscious self-report measures of emotion

  • Startle Reflex modulation is a non-conscious measure of raw affective information processing on the basis of motivational priming and relates to subcortical brain structures, e.g., [29]

  • Electroencephalography is mainly sensitive to cortical information processing, but it involves the coordinated input from sub-cortical brain processes

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Summary

Introduction

There is an ever-increasing amount of pornographic material available online for public consumption [1,2]. Lack of regulation means that the Internet has quickly become an easy and efficient means by which pornographic material can be circulated, distributed, and available for consumption within one’s own home, with the benefits of accessibility, anonymity, and affordability [3,4].

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