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The Prevalence of Using Pornography for Information About How to Have Sex: Findings from a Nationally Representative Survey of U.S. Adolescents and Young Adults

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TLDR
Pornography was the most commonly endorsed helpful source for adolescents in the 18–24-year-old age group, as compared to other possible options such as sexual partners, friends, media, and health care professionals.
Abstract
We analyzed cross-sectional data collected from a U.S. nationally representative survey of individuals ages 14–24 years old on what sources of information from the past year they considered to be the most helpful about how to have sex (n = 600 adolescents ages 14–17 years old, and n = 666 young adults ages 18–24 years old). Among the 324 adolescents who indicated that they had been helped by at least one source of information, helpful information was most likely to have come from parents (31.0%) and friends (21.6%). Only 8.4% of adolescents said pornography was helpful. However, for those in the 18–24-year-old age group, pornography was the most commonly endorsed helpful source (24.5%), as compared to other possible options such as sexual partners, friends, media, and health care professionals. Multivariable regression analyses revealed that indicating that pornography was the most helpful source of information about how to have sex, compared to the other sources, was inversely associated with being female (OR = 0.32, p = .001), inversely associated with identifying as bisexual compared to heterosexual (OR = 0.15, p = .038), positively associated with being Black compared to being white non-Hispanic (OR = 4.26, p = .021), inversely associated with reporting a household income of either $25 K to $49,999 (OR = 0.31, p = .010) or $50 K to $74,999 (OR = 0.36, p = .019) compared to more than $75 K, and positively associated with having masturbated (OR = 13.20, p = .005). Subsequent research should investigate the role of pornography in both adolescent and adult sexual development, including why one-quarter of U.S. young adults say that pornography is a helpful source of information about how to have sex and what they think that they are learning from it.

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The role of sexually explicit material in the sexual development of same-sex-attracted Black adolescent males

TL;DR: The role SEM plays in the sexual development of a sample of Black same-sex attracted (SSA) young adolescent males ages 15–19 is described and development of Internet-based HIV/STI prevention strategies targeting young Black SSA men who may be accessing SEM is called for.
Journal ArticleDOI

Porn Sex versus Real Sex: Sexual Behaviors Reported by a U.S. Probability Survey Compared to Depictions of Sex in Mainstream Internet-Based Male–Female Pornography

TL;DR: The authors found that participants who reported pornography use during their most recent sexual experience were more likely to report having engaged in oral sex, penile-anal intercourse, and sex toy use and were also more likely than participants who did not report pornography use.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescents' Online Pornography Exposure and Its Relationship to Sociodemographic and Psychopathological Correlates: A Cross-Sectional Study in Six European Countries.

TL;DR: In this paper, a cross-sectional school-based survey of 10,930 adolescents in six European countries (Greece, Spain, Poland, Romania, the Netherlands, and Iceland) was carried out to assess the prevalence of online exposure to pornography in European adolescents and its relationship to sociodemographic and psychopathological correlates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Porn Sex versus Real Sex: Sexual Behaviors Reported by a U.S. Probability Survey Compared to Depictions of Sex in Mainstream Internet-Based Male–Female Pornography

TL;DR: This paper found that participants who reported pornography use during their most recent sexual experience were more likely to report having engaged in oral sex, penile-anal intercourse, and sex toy use and were also more likely than participants who did not report pornography use.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Normative Sexuality Development in Adolescence: A Decade in Review, 2000–2009

TL;DR: In this paper, a key innovation across the field of adolescent sexuality research over the last decade has been to conceptualize sexuality as a normative aspect of adolescent development, which has led to new views on sexual behavior, sexual selfhood and sexual socialization in the 21st century.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexy Media Matter: Exposure to Sexual Content in Music, Movies, Television, and Magazines Predicts Black and White Adolescents' Sexual Behavior

TL;DR: Exposure to sexual content in music, movies, television, and magazines accelerates white adolescents’ sexual activity and increases their risk of engaging in early sexual intercourse and the relationship was not statistically significant for black adolescents after controlling for other factors that were more predictive.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mass media are an important context for adolescents' sexual behavior.

TL;DR: Adolescents who are exposed to more sexual content in the media, and who perceive greater support from the media for teen sexual behavior, report greater intentions to engage in sexual intercourse and more sexual activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parent-Adolescent Sexual Communication and Adolescent Safer Sex Behavior A Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: Sexual communication with parents, particularly mothers, plays a small protective role in safer sex behavior among adolescents; this protective effect is more pronounced for girls than boys.

Original article Mass media as a sexual super peer for early maturing girls

TL;DR: The authors investigated the possibility that the mass media (television, movies, music, and magazines) serve as a kind of super peer for girls who enter puberty sooner than their age-mates.
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