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Journal Article

Citation

Perry SL. Soc. Ment. Health 2018; 8(3): 195-213.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/2156869317728373

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

While studies have consistently observed an association between pornography use and depressive symptoms, data limitations have precluded understanding the nature of this relationship. Drawing on data from a representative panel study of American adults and building on insights from stress process theory, this article demonstrates that the connection between pornography use and depressive symptoms hinges on the (1) (in)congruence between Americans' moral beliefs about pornography and their viewing practices and (2) gender. Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses reveal that American men (not women) who believe viewing pornography is always immoral but watch it anyway are more likely to experience depressive symptoms compared to others who do not report this incongruence.

RESULTS also suggest the connection between viewing pornography and depressive symptoms is bidirectional, contingent on men's moral evaluation of its use. For male porn users who morally reject it, pornography use predicts depressive symptoms at low frequencies, likely stemming from cognitive stress or dissonance. For those who do not morally reject porn, however, only viewing it at the highest frequencies is associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms, which suggests reverse causation--depressed men likely view higher levels of pornography as a coping aid, especially when they do not view it as immoral.


Language: en

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