Reading Pornography: Methodological Considerations in Evaluating Pornography Research

Fisher, William A.;Kohut, Taylor
(2020) Journal of Sexual Medicine : basic research and clinical studies in male and female sexual function and dysfunction — Vol. 17, n° 2, p. 195-209 (2020)

Files

WAFREVISIONREADINGPORNOGRAPHYJSM-INVITEDSUBMISSION-body.doc
  • Open Access
  • Microsoft Word
  • 373.5 KB
WAFREVISIONREADINGPORNOGRAPHYJSM-INVITEDSUBMISSION-tables.doc
  • Open Access
  • Microsoft Word
  • 39 KB

Details

Authors
Abstract
Introduction With the emergence of rapidly expanding access to sexually explicit materials, research concerning pornography prevalence, pornography content, pornography users, and pornography effects has increased steadily among scientists and clinicians. Findings in this research area are often inconsistent and controversial. Aim The current discussion aims to assist scientists and clinicians to “read pornography—that is, pornography research—” from an appropriately rigorous scientific perspective, so that we may approach work in this area with a clearer understanding of the often contested evidence base and a clearer understanding of what science can, and cannot, tell us, at present, about pornography prevalence, content, users, and effects. Methods Discussion focuses on the critical implications, for scientific validity and clinical application, of variations in research design, participant sampling, conceptual and operational definitions of “pornography” and “use,” measurement of sexually violent content, and measurement of pornography use effects. Results Failure to acknowledge the implications of research design limitations and heterogeneity of conceptual and operational definitions of pornography have resulted in an inconsistent and contested evidence base in this area. Clinical Implications Clinicians must rigorously evaluate the published literature concerning pornography, according to classical principles of scientific research, before clinical application of diverse and inconsistent research claims. Strength & Limitations This analysis brings to bear classic scientific considerations in attempting to strengthen critical reading and research contributions in the area of pornography prevalence, content, users, correlates, and effects. Many of the assertions and suggestions contained in this discussion await empirical verification. Conclusion Rigorous application of basic scientific research principles should guide the evaluation and conduct of research concerning pornography prevalence, content, users, covariates, and effects.
Affiliations

Citations

Fisher, W. A., & Kohut, T. (2020). Reading Pornography: Methodological Considerations in Evaluating Pornography Research. Journal of Sexual Medicine : basic research and clinical studies in male and female sexual function and dysfunction, 17(2), 195-209. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsxm.2019.11.257 (Original work published 2020)