Adolescents who view pornography more frequently are more likely to engage in dominant sexual behaviors, which may be associated with lower sexual satisfaction in romantic relationships. A recent replication study evaluated these behavioral connections in American teens to see if the previous findings held true. The results were published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior.
Researchers have been trying to understand how media consumption affects adolescent development for years. International organizations such as the World Sexual Health Association recognize sexual satisfaction as an essential component of overall human well-being throughout the human lifespan. However, few studies have investigated how modern digital habits, such as viewing Internet pornography, are related to young people’s romantic fulfillment.
One prominent theory used to examine media effects is known as the sexual script acquisition, activation, and adaptation model. This framework suggests that when young people repeatedly see certain acts in sexual media, they learn those acts as symbolic guidelines. During the learning phase, you learn new scripts entirely from the screen.
During the activation phase, media exposure brings a known script into the mind. Finally, the application of the script occurs when viewers actually use these mental blueprints to guide their behavioral decisions in real life. These scripts answer basic questions about who should do what to whom, exactly how it should be done, and under what circumstances.
When media repeatedly presents certain behaviors as normal, common, and fun, viewers are more likely to imitate those behaviors in their own bedrooms. Content analysis of popular Internet pornography regularly shows recurring themes of sexual domination. These controlling behaviors include aggressive physical acts, such as choking or spanking, and verbal domination, such as using derogatory name-calling toward your partner.
Indiana University media researcher Paul J. Wright and his colleagues designed the study to follow up on a similar study conducted several years ago. There have been recent efforts in social science and media studies to see if old experiments can be reliably replicated. Wright and his research team wanted to test whether they could replicate their previous results in a new sample of American teens.
In the original study, researchers proposed a three-step behavioral pathway. They theorized that increased exposure to dominant behavior in pornography would increase the likelihood that teens would imitate that behavior toward their own partners. The researchers also reasoned that sexually dominant behavior could create emotional distance between younger, less experienced partners.
Because sexual satisfaction is often enhanced by warm, intimate, and tender interactions, this emotional distance was expected to be correlated with decreased sensual satisfaction. Ultimately, the team hypothesized that viewing crude pornography served as a starting point that ultimately led to unsatisfying sexual relationships.
To retest their theory, the researchers relied on data from the National Sexual Health and Behavior Survey. This ongoing project is a nationally representative probability survey aimed at tracking trends in Americans’ reproductive habits. The survey company recruits households through physical addresses and also provides internet access and devices to allow a wide range of members of the public to participate.
Once the data is collected, statistical weights are applied to correct for natural imbalances among respondents. This weighting process helps ensure that the results accurately reflect the broader population of the country as a whole. The survey data used for this study came from a specific survey wave that included multiple questions about porn habits.
For this particular analysis, the team looked at data from early teens, ages 14 to 17. Studying this behavioral pathway requires very specific data. This means that participating youth must meet several strict criteria. They had to be sexually experienced and also needed to be currently in a romantic relationship to accurately assess the health of the relationship.
Finding participants who meet all the criteria has proven difficult, as sexual activity among adolescents has been on the decline overall in recent years. Of the more than 1,000 teens who completed the survey, only 59 met all the requirements to be included in the final analysis.
The study asked these 59 teenagers about their viewing habits over the past six months. They reported whether they had viewed pornography with themes such as simulated rape, bondage, coercion, double penetration, and facial ejaculation. Measuring these opinions over the last six months is intended to minimize flaws in human memory.
Following the media questions, the survey asked whether the teens had engaged in certain controlling acts with their partners in the past month. These actions are strictly defined to avoid confusion. For example, choking means strangling your partner with your hands or an object, and spanking means hitting your partner hard enough to leave physical marks.
Finally, teens rated their overall sexual satisfaction with their current partner on a standard 5-point scale. The researchers used specialized statistical modeling to track the relationship between these three variables. They found that teens who reported watching more pornography with dominant themes also reported higher levels of dominant behavior in their sex lives.
This direct behavioral link partially replicated the results of the original study. Survey data also showed secondary associations regarding relationship well-being. Teens who engaged in higher levels of sexually dominant behavior reported lower sexual satisfaction with their partners.
This particular mathematical association between unruly behavior and decreased satisfaction perfectly replicated the earlier research data. However, when looking at the entire proposed chain reaction, the results were mixed. Statistical tests measuring the indirect effect of porn exposure on reducing sexual satisfaction through dominant behavior were not statistically significant.
Although the mathematical trend was in exactly the same direction as the original study, the numbers were too weak to fully confirm the full theoretical path. To evaluate these results, we need to look at the limitations of the available data pool. The most obvious problem with this study is the incredibly small sample size of 59 teenagers.
A larger group of eligible participants would provide more statistical power and potentially change the strength of the final three-stage mathematical relationship. This methodology itself has some hurdles to widespread interpretation. Teens were asked only one question about their sexual satisfaction, so they may not be getting a complete picture of their emotional and relationship health.
Furthermore, because the study required actual parental consent, adolescents who were allowed to participate may differ in fundamental ways from adolescents whose parents did not allow them to complete the sexual health survey. Because the data were taken as a snapshot of one particular season, the results can only show associations rather than a strict chronological order of cause and effect.
It’s entirely possible that teens who are already not very happy in their relationships will seek out different types of pornography or try new dominant acts. To elucidate this timeline and truly test the theory, researchers recommend funding long-term tracking projects that observe the same group of teens over several years.
The study, “Adolescent Porn Exposure, Sexually Dominant Behavior, and Partner Sexual Satisfaction: Replication in a U.S. Probability Sample,” was authored by Paul J. Wright, Debbie Herbenick, and Robert S. Tokunaga.

