Brain Structure and Functional Connectivity Associated with Pornography Consumption: The Brain on Porn
Simone Kühn and Jürgen Gallinat
JAMA Psychiatry 71, no. 7 (2014): 827-834, doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.93.
Brain Structure and Functional Connectivity Associated with Pornography Consumption: The Brain on Porn
Simone Kühn and Jürgen Gallinat
JAMA Psychiatry 71, no. 7 (2014): 827-834, doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2014.93.
This German study of 64 men explored the relationship between the amount of pornography they consumed (i.e., dosage) and changes to their brains in areas influencing decision-making, motivation, and reward. The study found that more frequent, but not necessarily addictive pornography use, was associated with negative structural and functional changes in the brain, namely: 1) reduced gray matter,1 2) decreased reward circuit activation when viewing pornography,2 indicating possible tolerance,3 a known vulnerability for addiction, and 3) less functional connectivity4 between the reward system and the prefrontal cortex. Thus, this study showed that frequent and regular pornography users have smaller reward systems compared to those who use pornography seldom or irregularly.5 The findings also suggest that “subjects with high pornography consumption require even stronger stimuli to reach the same reward level.” 6 To hear the lead author discuss this study watch this brief video.
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Germany conducted a study exploring whether the amount of pornography one consumes is associated with structural and functional changes to the brain’s frontostriatal network—neural pathways connecting regions of the brain (e.g., prefrontal cortex, ventral tegmental area) which influence decision-making, motivation, and reward.7 The subjects were 64 adult males ranging in age from 21-45 years without psychiatric or neurological disorders. Researchers assessed pornography consumption by hours of current pornography (PH) use per week and years of pornography use. They tested for cue-reactivity—that is Pavlovian-type responses to conditioned cues—to pornography and nonsexual images (i.e., physical exercise), and evaluated for both neural structure and functional resting-state connectivity differences in their brains.
Findings
This study revealed that men with greater cumulative pornography use, but not necessarily addictive levels of use, had decreased gray matter, and exhibited reduced structural and functional connectivity in the brain. Why do these findings matter?
First, who wants a smaller brain? No one we know. While it is possible that men who use pornography more frequently naturally have smaller brains, this seems unlikely. It is more plausible that high pornography use is inducing volumetric changes to the brain structure as has been demonstrated in drug addiction research.
Second, while additional research is needed, this study suggests that with time the brains of pornography users adapt to sexual stimuli and thus require novel or more extreme stimuli in order to achieve reward—a phenomenon referred to commonly as “tolerance” in addiction literature. The experience of tolerance among frequent pornography users may be part of the reason why the Internet is awash in oceans of pornography, as the need for something novel, surprising, or extreme takes users on a quest for just the right image or video in order to “finish.”
Third, this study found decreased functional connectivity in the region of the brain responsible for aspects of cognitive control such as response inhibition, behavioral flexibility, attention, and future planning among men with higher pornography dosage. Thus, increased pornography use may result in neuroadaptations to the brain that actually inhibit one’s ability to decrease one’s future pornography use. It’s not surprising then to learn that “dysfunction of this circuity has been related to inappropriate behavioral choices, such as drug seeking, regardless of negative consequences.”14
These three findings converge with the large body of research showing similar negative brain impacts among those with other substance and behavioral disorders, thus suggesting that pornography use can become compulsive or addictive.
Finally, the researchers observed a positive association between pornography use and increased alcohol use and depression. The nature of this association is unclear but nevertheless concerning, and as the researchers noted, warrants further investigation.