More academic than explicit but beyond PORN and other ICD's Computers and access are major players add agonists and be aware the door to the problem is already open,its just one step closer for some.
channel4.com/programmes/por...
The flagship of the programme is an impressive neuroscience study involving Channel 4 and Dr Valerie Voon from the University of Cambridge. In it, Voon conducts a functional MRI experiment to test whether a group of men who admit to being compulsive porn users show different patterns of brain activity to a control group. The study hasn't yet been peer-reviewed, so caution is needed, but preliminary results reveal an interesting trend – compulsive users tend to show heightened responses to porn-related images within brain networks that mediate reward and motivation. These responses are, on the face of it, quite similar to those observed in people with drug or alcohol addictions.
Official bodies in psychiatry don't recognise compulsive porn use as an addiction. That's largely because the boundary conditions haven't been mapped out, the prevalence is unknown, and crucially – unlike the case with drugs or gambling – it's unclear to what extent (if any) compulsive use of porn harms lives. Professor Matt Field, a psychologist at the University of Liverpool, was interviewed as part of the programme. When asked what he thinks about compulsive porn use being framed as a separate addiction, he said: "Like anything people find pleasurable, whether it's chocolate or running or playing video games, internet porn can be addictive.
From what we know of impulse control disorders such as gambling addiction, it seems obvious that online porn, like anything that makes people feel good, might lead to compulsive behaviour, and that this compulsion might interfere negatively with people's lives. But that doesn't mean it will, and it doesn't mean that online porn is generally harmful. As Voon says, her results are neutral about non-compulsive porn use: "This is not dissimilar to the majority of the population who have tried legal (smoking/alcohol) or illegal drugs (cannabis, club drugs) but only a small proportion run into difficulties."
Voon and Field: as clichéd as it sounds, we simply need more research on porn use before leaping to ignorant conclusions about its addictive or harmful effects. What Porn on the Brain does best is get us all thinking about what sort of research that might be.