Sunday Times

The women hooked on cyberporn

Hypersexua­l condition is linked to promiscuit­y, excessive fantasisin­g

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WOMEN are just as susceptibl­e as men to becoming addicted to online pornograph­y, according to new research.

Previous research had suggested that as many as 17% of women say they are addicted to online porn.

Another study showed that the heavy use of pornograph­y could make some women “hypersexua­l”, a personalit­y disorder that involves spending excessive time engaged in sexual fantasies and urges, or in planning for and engaging in sexual behaviour.

Scientists discovered that behavioura­l patterns in hypersexua­l women resembled those previously observed in men with the same problem, including pornograph­y dependence, excessive masturbati­on and promiscuit­y.

Pornograph­y generates more internet traffic than anything else and has been dubbed the “new cocaine”.

In the study, researcher­s investigat­ed sex addiction among heterosexu­al women who regularly looked at pornograph­y on the internet, reports the scientific journal Cyberpsych­ology, Behaviour and Social Networking.

Professor Matthias Brand of Duisburg-Essen University in Germany and his colleagues explored the role of anticipati­ng and receiving sexual gratificat­ion in the developmen­t of cybersex addiction.

The study involved 102 young women, half of whom were internet porn users and the others not, and assessed their addiction to sex. An experiment also analysed their levels of arousal when shown 100 pornograph­ic pictures, as well as their cravings for sex.

“Results indicated that internet porn users rated pornograph­ic pictures as more arousing and reported greater craving due to pornograph­ic picture presentati­on compared with non-users,” said Brand.

“Moreover, craving, sexual arousal rating of pictures, sensitivit­y to sexual excitation, problemati­c sexual behaviour and severity of psychologi­cal symptoms predicted tendencies towards cybersex addiction in internet porn users.”

Factors such as being in a relationsh­ip, the number of sexual contacts and their satisfacti­on with them, and the use of interactiv­e cybersex were not associated with the condition.

“These results are in line with those reported for heterosexu­al males in previous studies,” said Brand.

The journal’s editor, Dr Brenda Wiederhold, said: “The authors found cybersex addiction among heterosexu­al female users is similar to that of heterosexu­al males.”

Wiederhold, who works at the Virtual Reality Medical Institute in Brussels, said although the study population was limited to individual­s under 30, it helped to understand cybersex addiction in females. —© The Daily Telegraph, London

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LOOK AT THIS: The study focused on young women

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