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12.Ikezono E, Yasuda K, Hattori Y. Effects of propranolol on epinephrine-induced arrhythmias during halothane anesthesia in man and cats. Anesth Analg 1969 Jul-Aug;48(4):598-604. Oct 03, 2017 Liquivid Video Exposure and Effects is an easy-to-use app that allows you to change a clip's exposure, saturation and white balance and apply different visual effects (also known as filters). Imports all common video formats and codecs in any resolution (including HD, 2K, 4K). Exports videos as MP4 files with H.264 codec. Using it allowed me to lengthen the exposure time to 1/3rd of a second, which was just enough the get some motion in the rushing waves and to achieve the look that I wanted for this shot. Had I used a 6-stop ND filter instead, the image would look quite different since the longer shutter speed would blur the water and lose the texture that I. 1.5 GB for installation: 1.5 GB for installation, SSD: Graphics: OpenGL 3.3-compatible video card with 512 MB video RAM, 1280x800 resolution (at 100% scale factor) OpenGL 4.2-compatible video card with 2GB dedicated video RAM, 1920x1080 resolution (at 100% scale factor) Mobile App: Apple iPhone or iPad with iOS 12.3 or higher. Health effects of sunlight exposure. Quite the same Wikipedia.

Noise pollution is generally defined as regular exposure to elevated sound levels that may lead to adverse effects in humans or other living organisms. According to the World Health Organization, sound levels less than 70 dB are not damaging to living organisms, regardless of how long or consistent the exposure is. Exposure for more than 8 hours to constant noise beyond 85 dB may be hazardous. If you work for 8 hours daily in close proximity to a busy road or highway, you are very likely exposed to traffic noise pollution around 85dB.

This type of pollution is so omnipresent in today's society that we often fail to even notice it anymore:

  • street traffic sounds from cars, buses, pedestrians, ambulances etc.
  • construction sounds like drilling or other heavy machinery in operation
  • airports, with constant elevated sounds from air traffic, i.e. planes taking off or landing
  • workplace sounds, often common in open-space offices
  • constant loud music in or near commercial venues
  • industrial sounds like fans, generators, compressor, mills
  • train stations traffic
  • household sounds, from the television set to music playing on the stereo or computer, vacuum cleaners, fans and coolers, washing machines, dishwashers, lawnmowers etc.
  • events involving fireworks, firecrackers, loudspeakers etc.
  • conflicts generate noise pollution through explosions, gunfire etc. The dysfunctions, in this case, are likely caused by the conflict and insecurity and less by the noise pollution in itself, although that compounds stress levels too.

Human Diseases Caused by Noise Pollution

Whether we realize we are subjected to it or not, noise pollution can be hazardous to our health in various ways.

  • Hypertension is, in this case, a direct result of noise pollution caused elevated blood levels for a longer period of time.
  • Hearing loss can be directly caused by noise pollution, whether listening to loud music in your headphones or being exposed to loud drilling noises at work, heavy air or land traffic, or separate incidents in which noise levels reach dangerous intervals, such as around140 dB for adult or 120 dB for children.
  • Sleep disturbances are usually caused by constant air or land traffic at night, and they are a serious condition in that they can affect everyday performance and lead to serious diseases.
  • Child development. Children appear to be more sensitive to noise pollution, and a number of noise-pollution-related diseases and dysfunctions are known to affect children, from hearing impairment to psychological and physical effects. Also, children who regularly use music players at high volumes are at risk of developing hearing dysfunctions. In 2001, it was estimated that 12.5% of American children between the ages of 6 to 19 years had impaired hearing in one or both ears
  • Various cardiovascular dysfunctions. Elevated blood pressure caused by noise pollution, especially during the night, can lead to various cardiovascular diseases.
  • Dementia isn't necessarily caused by noise pollution, but its onset can be favored or compounded by noise pollution.
  • Psychological dysfunctions and noise annoyance. Noise annoyance is, in fact, a recognized name for an emotional reaction that can have an immediate impact.

Effects of Noise Pollution on Wildlife and Marine Life

Our oceans are no longer quiet. Thousands of oil drills, sonars, seismic survey devices, coastal recreational watercraft and shipping vessels are now populating our waters, and that is a serious cause of noise pollution for marine life. Whales are among the most affected, as their hearing helps them orient themselves, feed and communicate. Noise pollution thus interferes with cetaceans' (whales and dolphins) feeding habits, reproductive patterns and migration routes, and can even cause hemorrhage and death.

Other than marine life, land animals are also affected by noise pollution in the form of traffic, firecrackers etc., and birds are especially affected by the increased air traffic.

Social and Economic Costs of Noise Pollution

The World Health Organization estimates that one out of three people in Europe is harmed by traffic noise. More than the purely medical effects of noise pollution on the individual, there is a significant social and economic impact. Since noise pollution leads to sleep disturbance, it affects the individual's work performance during the day, it leads to hypertension and cardiovascular disease and costs the health system additional time and money, and it negatively affects school performance in children.

Tips for Avoiding Noise Pollution

Exposure
  • Wear earplugs whenever exposed to elevated noise levels
  • Maintain a level of around 35 dB in your bedroom at night, and around 40 dB in your house during the day
  • If possible, choose your residential area as far removed from heavy traffic as you can
  • Avoid prolonged use of earphones, especially at elevated sound levels
  • If possible, avoid jobs with regular exposure to elevated sound levels

Sources:

Table of Contents

Pornography changes the habits of the mind, the inner private self. Its use can easily become habitual, which in turn leads to desensitization, boredom, distorted views of reality, and an objectification of women. There are also numerous clinical consequences to pornography use, including increased risk for significant physical and mental health problems and a greater likelihood of committing a sex-based crime.

1. Effects on the Mind, Body, and Soul

The 'digital revolution' has led to great strides in productivity, communication, and other desirable ends, but pornographers also have harnessed its power for their profit. The cost has been a further weakening of the nation's citizens and families, a development that should be of grave concern to all. The social sciences demonstrate the appropriateness of this concern.

Two reports, one by the American Psychological Association on hyper-sexualized girls, and the other by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy on the pornographic content of phone texting among teenagers, make clear that the digital revolution is being used by younger and younger children to dismantle the barriers that channel sexuality into family life.1)

Pornography, as a visual (mis)representation of sexuality, distorts an individual's concept of sexual relations by objectifying them, which, in turn, alters both sexual attitudes and behavior. It is a major threat to marriage, to family, to children, and to individual happiness.

Social scientists, clinical psychologists, and biologists have begun to clarify some of the social and psychological effects of pornography, and neurologists are beginning to delineate the biological mechanisms through which pornography produces its powerful effects on people.

Pornography's power to undermine individual and social functioning is powerful and deep:

  • Effect on the Mind: Pornography significantly distorts attitudes and perceptions about the nature of sexual intercourse. Men who habitually look at pornography have a higher tolerance for abnormal sexual behaviors, sexual aggression, promiscuity, and even rape. In addition, men begin to view women and even children as 'sex objects,' commodities or instruments for their pleasure, not as persons with their own inherent dignity.
  • Effect on the Body: Pornography is very addictive. The addictive aspect of pornography has a biological substrate, with dopamine hormone release acting as one of the mechanisms for forming the transmission pathway to pleasure centers of the brain. Also, the increased sexual permissiveness engendered by pornography increases the risk of contracting a sexually transmitted disease or of being an unwitting parent in an out-of-wedlock pregnancy.
  • Effect on the Heart: Pornography affects people's emotional lives. Married men who are involved in pornography feel less satisfied with their marital sexual relations and less emotionally attached to their wives. Women married to men with a pornography addiction report feelings of betrayal, mistrust, and anger. Pornographic use may lead to infidelity and even divorce. Adolescents who view pornography feel shame, diminished self-confidence, and sexual uncertainty.

2. Desensitization, Habituation, and Boredom

Prolonged use of pornography produces habituation,2) boredom, and sexual dissatisfaction among female and male viewers,3) and is associated with more lenient views of extramarital sexual relations and recreational attitudes toward sex.4) A 2000 study of college freshmen found that the habitual use of pornography led to greater tolerance of sexually explicit material, thus requiring more novel and bizarre material to achieve the same level of arousal or interest.5) For example, habituation may lead to watching 'depictions of group sex, sadomasochistic practices, and sexual contact with animals,'6) engaging in anal intercourse,7) and trivializing 'nonviolent forms of the sexual abuse of children.'8)

The pornography industry adapted to this desire for more bizarre and uncommon images. An analysis of the content of Playboy, Penthouse, and Hustler from the years 1953 to 1984 revealed 6,004 child images and an additional 14,854 images depicting crime or violence. Furthermore, nearly two-thirds of the child images were sexual and violent, with most of the images displaying girls between the ages of three and eleven years of age. Each of these magazines portrayed the scenes involving children as though the child had been unharmed by the sexual scene or even benefited from it.9)

Heavy exposure to pornography leads men to judge their mates as sexually less attractive,10) resulting in less satisfaction with their affection, physical appearance, and sexual behavior.11) The need for more intense sexual stimulation brought on by pornography can lead to boredom in normal relationships and a greater likelihood of seeking sexual pleasure outside of marriage. Repeated exposure to pornography leads the viewer to consider 'recreational sexual engagements' as increasingly important,12) and changes the viewer to being very accepting of sexual permissiveness.13)

3. Distorted Perception of Reality

Pornography presents sexual access as relentless, 'a sporting event that amounts to innocent fun' with inconsequential effects on emotions, perceptions, and health.14) This is not the case, however. Pornography leads to distorted perceptions of social reality: an exaggerated perception of the level of sexual activity in the general population,15) an inflated estimate 'of the incidence of premarital and extramarital sexual activity, as well as increased assessment of male and female promiscuity,' 'an overestimation of almost all sexual activities performed by sexually active adults,'16) and an overestimation of the general prevalence of perversions such as group sex, bestiality, and sadomasochistic activity.17) Thus, the beliefs being formed in the mind of the viewer of pornography are far removed from reality. A case could be made that repeated viewing of pornography induces a mental illness in matters sexual.

These distortions result in an acceptance of three beliefs: (1) sexual relationships are recreational in nature, (2) men are generally sexually driven, and (3) women are sex objects or commodities.18) These are called 'permission-giving beliefs' because they result in assumptions that one's behavior is normal, acceptable, and commonplace, and thus not hurtful to anyone else.19) These beliefs are deepened and reinforced by masturbation while viewing pornography,20) a frequent practice among those who use pornography to deal with stress.21)

When male and female viewers do not believe that exposure to pornography has any effect upon their personal views or lives,22) they more readily internalize abnormal sexual attitudes and increase the likelihood that they will engage in perverse sexual behaviors.23)

All of these distortions amount to a serious misunderstanding about sexuality and relationships and are a dangerous distortion of the nature of social life.24) Those who perceive pornographic sexual scenes as depicting reality tend to be more accepting of sexual permissiveness than others.25) Prolonged exposure to pornography fosters the belief that sexual inactivity constitutes a health risk.26)

Liquibid Video Exposure And Effects 1 2 30 Degree Elbows Pvc Conduit

4. Sexually Transmitted Disease and Out of Wedlock Pregnancy

Since pornography encourages sexually permissive attitudes and behavior, users of pornography have a higher likelihood of contracting a sexually transmitted disease or fathering an out-of-wedlock pregnancy. Pornography's frequent depiction of intercourse without condoms (87 percent of the time) is an invitation for the promiscuous to contract a sexually transmitted disease,27) to have a child out of wedlock and to have multiple sex partners.28) Pornography also promotes sexual compulsiveness, which doubles the likelihood of being infected with a sexually transmitted disease.29)

5. Sexual Addiction

Pornography and 'cybersex' are highly addictive and can lead to sexually compulsive behaviors (that decrease a person's capacity to perform other major tasks in life). Over 90 percent of therapists surveyed in one study believed that a person could become addicted to 'cybersex.'30) In an American survey, 57 percent of frequent viewers used online sexual activity to deal with stress.31) A 2006 Swedish study of regular Internet pornography users found that about six percent were compulsive users and that these compulsives also used much more non-Internet pornography as well.32)

Addictive pornography use leads to lower self-esteem and a weakened ability to carry out a meaningful social and work life. A survey of pornography addicts found that they disliked the 'out of control' feeling and the time consumption that their pornography use engendered. All of the sexual compulsives reported they had felt distressed and experienced impairment in an important aspect of their lives as a result of their addiction. Almost half of the sexual compulsives said their behavior had significant negative results in their social lives, and a quarter reported negative effects on their job.33) In another survey, sexual compulsives and sexual addicts were 23 times more likely than those without a problem to state that discovering online sexual material was the worst thing that had ever happened in their life.34) No wonder then that severe clinical depression was reported twice as frequently among Internet pornography users compared to non-users.35)

6. Aggression and Abuse

Intense use of pornography is strongly related to sexual aggression,36) and among frequent viewers of pornography, there is a marked increase in sexual callousness, including the 'rape myth acceptance.'37) Cinemagraph pro 2 1 2.

A significant portion of pornography is violent in content. A study of different pornographic media found violence in almost a quarter of magazine scenes, in more than a quarter of video scenes, and in almost half (over 42 percent) of online pornography. A second study found that almost half the violent Internet scenes included nonconsensual sex.38)

The data suggest 'a modest connection between exposure to pornography and subsequent behavioral aggression,'39) though when men consume violent pornography (i.e. depicting rape or torture), they are more likely to commit acts of sexual aggression.40) Dangerously, pornography strongly affects psychotic men, who are more likely to act out their impulses.41)

Myriad 4 2 1 – audio batch processor maker. Consumption of nonviolent pornography also increases men's self-acknowledged willingness to force compliance with their particular sexual desires on reluctant partners.42) And though there are conflicting data on the relative effects of violent versus non-violent pornography,43) there is little doubt that the consumption of pornography leads to a significant increase in 'rape myth acceptance,'44) which involves a reduction of sympathy with rape victims and a trivialization of rape as a criminal offense,45) a diminished concern about child sexual abuse, short of the rape of children,46) and an increased preparedness to resort to rape.47)

One study at a rape crisis center interviewed 100 sexually abused women to determine if pornography played a role in any past incidences of sexual abuse. While 58 percent could not say, 28 percent stated that their abuser had in fact used pornography. 4ukey – password manager 1 0 1 2 exe. Of this 28 percent (women who were aware that their abuser used pornography), 40 percent (or 11 percent of the total group) reported that pornography actually played a role in the abusive incident they experienced. In some cases, the abuser had watched pornography before abusing the woman, in one case he used pornography while committing the abuse, and in yet some other cases he forced his victim to participate in the making of a pornographic film.48)

1) Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls, American Psychological Association, Washington D.C., 2008 at http://www.apa.org/pi/wpo/sexualizationrep.pdf; and: National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy: 'SEX And TECH, Results from a survey of teens and young adults,' Washington D.C., 2008 at http://www.thenationalcampaign.org/SEXTECH/PDF/SexTech_Summary.pdf.
2) Dolf Zillman, Indiana University, Paper prepared for the Surgeon General's Workshop on Pornography and Public Health, Arlington VA, 1986. Available at http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/NN/B/C/K/V/_/nnbckv.pdf. Accessed April 23, 2012.
3) James B. Weaver III, 'The Effects of Pornography Addiction on Families and Communities,' presented before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Washington, D.C. (November 18, 2004), 2, 4.
4) Ven-hwei Lo and Ran Wei, 'Exposure to Internet Pornography and Taiwanese Adolescents' Sexual Attitudes and Behavior,' Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 49, (2005): 221-37 (230); Jochen Peter and Patti M. Valkenburg, 'Adolescents' Exposure to Sexually Explicit Online Material and Recreational Attitudes toward Sex,' Journal of Communication 56, (2006): 639-660 (654).
5) , 15) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 41.
6) , 8) , 16) James B. Weaver III, 'The Effects of Pornography Addiction on Families and Communities,' presented before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Washington, D.C. (November 18, 2004), 3.
7) Elisabet Häggström-Nordin, Ulf Hanson, and Tanja Tydén. 'Associations Between Pornography Consumption and Sexual Practices Among Adolescents in Sweden,' International journal of STD & AIDS 16, no. 2 (2005): 104-5.
9) Judith A. Reisman, 'The Psychopharmacology of Pictorial Pornography Restructuring Brain, Mind & Memory & Subverting Freedom of Speech' 26, (2007). Communication with the author.
10) , 42) , 45) , 47) Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant, 'Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction,' Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, (1988): 439.
11) Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant, 'Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction,' Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, (1988): 448.
12) Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant, 'Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction,' Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, (1988): 450.
13) Ven-hwei Lo and Ran Wei, 'Exposure to Internet Pornography and Taiwanese Adolescents' Sexual Attitudes and Behavior,' Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 49, (2005): 221-37 (233).
14) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 43.
17) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 41-2.
18) L. Monique Ward, 'Does Television Exposure Affect Emerging Adults' Attitudes and Assumptions about Sexual Relationships? Correlational and Experimental Confirmation,' Journal of Youth and Adolescence 31, (2002): 1-15 (12).
19) , 24) Mary Anne Layden, Center for Cognitive Therapy, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania (Testimony for U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, November 18, 2004).
20) Sylvain C. Boies, 'University Students' Uses of and Reactions to Online Sexual Information and Entertainment: Links to Online and Offline Sexual Behavior,' The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality 11, (2002): 77-89 (86).
21) Al Cooper, Nathan Galbreath, and Michael A. Becker, 'Sex on the Internet: Furthering our Understanding of Men with Online Sexual Problems,' Psychology of Addictive Behavior 18, (2004): 226.
22) Nicole Daluga, A Content Analysis of Sexual Risk and Protective Behaviors and Messages in Sexually Explicit Web Pages Viewed by a National Probability Sample of U.S. Adolescents (Atlanta, Georgia: Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University, 2002), 255-279, 19; K.A. Cameron, L.F. Salazar, J.M. Bernhardt, N. Burgess-Whitman, G.M. Wingood, and R.J. DiClemente, 'Adolescents' Experience with Sex on the Web: Results from Online Focus Groups,' Journal of Adolescence 28, (2005): 535-40 (537).
23) Mary Anne Layden, Center for Cognitive Therapy, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania (Testimony for U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation (November 18, 2004).
25) Laramie D. Taylor, 'Effects of Visual and Verbal Sexual Television Content and Perceived Realism on Attitudes and Beliefs,' The Journal of Sex Research 42, (2005): 130-37 (135).
26) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 42
27) Nicole Daluga, A Content Analysis of Sexual Risk and Protective Behaviors and Messages in Sexually Explicit Web Pages Viewed by a National Probability Sample of U.S. Adolescents (Atlanta, Georgia: Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University, 2002), 255-279.
28) Gina M. Wingood, Ralph J. DiClemente, Kathy Harrington, Suzy Davies, Edward W. Hook, and M. Kim Oh, 'Exposure to X-rated Movies and Adolescents' Sexual and Contraceptive-related Attitudes and Behaviors,' Pediatrics 107, (2001): 1116-19.
29) Kristian Daneback, Michael W. Ross, and Sven-Axel Månsson, 'Characteristics and Behaviors of Sexual Compulsives Who Use the Internet for Sexual Purposes,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 13, (2006): 53-67 (59-60).
30) Peter D. Goldberg, Brennan D. Peterson, Karen H. Rosen, and Mary Linda Sara, 'Cybersex: The Impact of a Contemporary Problem on the Practices of Marriage and Family Therapists,' Journal of Marital and Family Therapy 34, (2008): 469-80 (475).
31) A. Cooper, N. Galbreath, and M.A. Becker, 'Sex on the Internet: Furthering Our Understanding of Men with Online Sexual Problems,' Psychology of Addictive Behavior 18, (2004): 223-30 (225).
32) Kristian Daneback, Michael W. Ross, and Sven-Axel Månsson, 'Characteristics and Behaviors of Sexual Compulsives Who Use the Internet for Sexual Purposes,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 13, (2006): 53-67 (59, 61).
33) Donald W. Black, Laura L.D. Kehrberg, Denise L. Flumerfelt, and Steven S. Schlosser, 'Characteristics of 36 Subjects Reporting Compulsive Sexual Behavior,' American Journal of Psychiatry 154, (1997): 243-49 (247).

Liquibid Video Exposure And Effects 1 2 30 Mg

34) Al Cooper, Eric Griffin-Shelley, David L. Delmonico, and Robin M. Mathy, 'Online Sexual Problems: Assessment and Predictive Variables,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 8, (2001): 267-85 (281).
35) Michele L. Ybarra and Kimberly J. Mitchell, 'Exposure to Internet Pornography among Children and Adolescents: A National Survey,' CyberPsychology & Behavior 8, (2005): 473-86 (479).
36) Vanessa Vega and Neil M. Malamuth, 'Predicting Sexual Aggression: The Role of Pornography in the Context of General and Specific Risk Factors,' Aggressive Behavior 33, (2007): 104-17 (109).
37) , 46) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 42.
300
  • Wear earplugs whenever exposed to elevated noise levels
  • Maintain a level of around 35 dB in your bedroom at night, and around 40 dB in your house during the day
  • If possible, choose your residential area as far removed from heavy traffic as you can
  • Avoid prolonged use of earphones, especially at elevated sound levels
  • If possible, avoid jobs with regular exposure to elevated sound levels

Sources:

Table of Contents

Pornography changes the habits of the mind, the inner private self. Its use can easily become habitual, which in turn leads to desensitization, boredom, distorted views of reality, and an objectification of women. There are also numerous clinical consequences to pornography use, including increased risk for significant physical and mental health problems and a greater likelihood of committing a sex-based crime.

1. Effects on the Mind, Body, and Soul

The 'digital revolution' has led to great strides in productivity, communication, and other desirable ends, but pornographers also have harnessed its power for their profit. The cost has been a further weakening of the nation's citizens and families, a development that should be of grave concern to all. The social sciences demonstrate the appropriateness of this concern.

Two reports, one by the American Psychological Association on hyper-sexualized girls, and the other by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy on the pornographic content of phone texting among teenagers, make clear that the digital revolution is being used by younger and younger children to dismantle the barriers that channel sexuality into family life.1)

Pornography, as a visual (mis)representation of sexuality, distorts an individual's concept of sexual relations by objectifying them, which, in turn, alters both sexual attitudes and behavior. It is a major threat to marriage, to family, to children, and to individual happiness.

Social scientists, clinical psychologists, and biologists have begun to clarify some of the social and psychological effects of pornography, and neurologists are beginning to delineate the biological mechanisms through which pornography produces its powerful effects on people.

Pornography's power to undermine individual and social functioning is powerful and deep:

  • Effect on the Mind: Pornography significantly distorts attitudes and perceptions about the nature of sexual intercourse. Men who habitually look at pornography have a higher tolerance for abnormal sexual behaviors, sexual aggression, promiscuity, and even rape. In addition, men begin to view women and even children as 'sex objects,' commodities or instruments for their pleasure, not as persons with their own inherent dignity.
  • Effect on the Body: Pornography is very addictive. The addictive aspect of pornography has a biological substrate, with dopamine hormone release acting as one of the mechanisms for forming the transmission pathway to pleasure centers of the brain. Also, the increased sexual permissiveness engendered by pornography increases the risk of contracting a sexually transmitted disease or of being an unwitting parent in an out-of-wedlock pregnancy.
  • Effect on the Heart: Pornography affects people's emotional lives. Married men who are involved in pornography feel less satisfied with their marital sexual relations and less emotionally attached to their wives. Women married to men with a pornography addiction report feelings of betrayal, mistrust, and anger. Pornographic use may lead to infidelity and even divorce. Adolescents who view pornography feel shame, diminished self-confidence, and sexual uncertainty.

2. Desensitization, Habituation, and Boredom

Prolonged use of pornography produces habituation,2) boredom, and sexual dissatisfaction among female and male viewers,3) and is associated with more lenient views of extramarital sexual relations and recreational attitudes toward sex.4) A 2000 study of college freshmen found that the habitual use of pornography led to greater tolerance of sexually explicit material, thus requiring more novel and bizarre material to achieve the same level of arousal or interest.5) For example, habituation may lead to watching 'depictions of group sex, sadomasochistic practices, and sexual contact with animals,'6) engaging in anal intercourse,7) and trivializing 'nonviolent forms of the sexual abuse of children.'8)

The pornography industry adapted to this desire for more bizarre and uncommon images. An analysis of the content of Playboy, Penthouse, and Hustler from the years 1953 to 1984 revealed 6,004 child images and an additional 14,854 images depicting crime or violence. Furthermore, nearly two-thirds of the child images were sexual and violent, with most of the images displaying girls between the ages of three and eleven years of age. Each of these magazines portrayed the scenes involving children as though the child had been unharmed by the sexual scene or even benefited from it.9)

Heavy exposure to pornography leads men to judge their mates as sexually less attractive,10) resulting in less satisfaction with their affection, physical appearance, and sexual behavior.11) The need for more intense sexual stimulation brought on by pornography can lead to boredom in normal relationships and a greater likelihood of seeking sexual pleasure outside of marriage. Repeated exposure to pornography leads the viewer to consider 'recreational sexual engagements' as increasingly important,12) and changes the viewer to being very accepting of sexual permissiveness.13)

3. Distorted Perception of Reality

Pornography presents sexual access as relentless, 'a sporting event that amounts to innocent fun' with inconsequential effects on emotions, perceptions, and health.14) This is not the case, however. Pornography leads to distorted perceptions of social reality: an exaggerated perception of the level of sexual activity in the general population,15) an inflated estimate 'of the incidence of premarital and extramarital sexual activity, as well as increased assessment of male and female promiscuity,' 'an overestimation of almost all sexual activities performed by sexually active adults,'16) and an overestimation of the general prevalence of perversions such as group sex, bestiality, and sadomasochistic activity.17) Thus, the beliefs being formed in the mind of the viewer of pornography are far removed from reality. A case could be made that repeated viewing of pornography induces a mental illness in matters sexual.

These distortions result in an acceptance of three beliefs: (1) sexual relationships are recreational in nature, (2) men are generally sexually driven, and (3) women are sex objects or commodities.18) These are called 'permission-giving beliefs' because they result in assumptions that one's behavior is normal, acceptable, and commonplace, and thus not hurtful to anyone else.19) These beliefs are deepened and reinforced by masturbation while viewing pornography,20) a frequent practice among those who use pornography to deal with stress.21)

When male and female viewers do not believe that exposure to pornography has any effect upon their personal views or lives,22) they more readily internalize abnormal sexual attitudes and increase the likelihood that they will engage in perverse sexual behaviors.23)

All of these distortions amount to a serious misunderstanding about sexuality and relationships and are a dangerous distortion of the nature of social life.24) Those who perceive pornographic sexual scenes as depicting reality tend to be more accepting of sexual permissiveness than others.25) Prolonged exposure to pornography fosters the belief that sexual inactivity constitutes a health risk.26)

Liquibid Video Exposure And Effects 1 2 30 Degree Elbows Pvc Conduit

4. Sexually Transmitted Disease and Out of Wedlock Pregnancy

Since pornography encourages sexually permissive attitudes and behavior, users of pornography have a higher likelihood of contracting a sexually transmitted disease or fathering an out-of-wedlock pregnancy. Pornography's frequent depiction of intercourse without condoms (87 percent of the time) is an invitation for the promiscuous to contract a sexually transmitted disease,27) to have a child out of wedlock and to have multiple sex partners.28) Pornography also promotes sexual compulsiveness, which doubles the likelihood of being infected with a sexually transmitted disease.29)

5. Sexual Addiction

Pornography and 'cybersex' are highly addictive and can lead to sexually compulsive behaviors (that decrease a person's capacity to perform other major tasks in life). Over 90 percent of therapists surveyed in one study believed that a person could become addicted to 'cybersex.'30) In an American survey, 57 percent of frequent viewers used online sexual activity to deal with stress.31) A 2006 Swedish study of regular Internet pornography users found that about six percent were compulsive users and that these compulsives also used much more non-Internet pornography as well.32)

Addictive pornography use leads to lower self-esteem and a weakened ability to carry out a meaningful social and work life. A survey of pornography addicts found that they disliked the 'out of control' feeling and the time consumption that their pornography use engendered. All of the sexual compulsives reported they had felt distressed and experienced impairment in an important aspect of their lives as a result of their addiction. Almost half of the sexual compulsives said their behavior had significant negative results in their social lives, and a quarter reported negative effects on their job.33) In another survey, sexual compulsives and sexual addicts were 23 times more likely than those without a problem to state that discovering online sexual material was the worst thing that had ever happened in their life.34) No wonder then that severe clinical depression was reported twice as frequently among Internet pornography users compared to non-users.35)

6. Aggression and Abuse

Intense use of pornography is strongly related to sexual aggression,36) and among frequent viewers of pornography, there is a marked increase in sexual callousness, including the 'rape myth acceptance.'37) Cinemagraph pro 2 1 2.

A significant portion of pornography is violent in content. A study of different pornographic media found violence in almost a quarter of magazine scenes, in more than a quarter of video scenes, and in almost half (over 42 percent) of online pornography. A second study found that almost half the violent Internet scenes included nonconsensual sex.38)

The data suggest 'a modest connection between exposure to pornography and subsequent behavioral aggression,'39) though when men consume violent pornography (i.e. depicting rape or torture), they are more likely to commit acts of sexual aggression.40) Dangerously, pornography strongly affects psychotic men, who are more likely to act out their impulses.41)

Myriad 4 2 1 – audio batch processor maker. Consumption of nonviolent pornography also increases men's self-acknowledged willingness to force compliance with their particular sexual desires on reluctant partners.42) And though there are conflicting data on the relative effects of violent versus non-violent pornography,43) there is little doubt that the consumption of pornography leads to a significant increase in 'rape myth acceptance,'44) which involves a reduction of sympathy with rape victims and a trivialization of rape as a criminal offense,45) a diminished concern about child sexual abuse, short of the rape of children,46) and an increased preparedness to resort to rape.47)

One study at a rape crisis center interviewed 100 sexually abused women to determine if pornography played a role in any past incidences of sexual abuse. While 58 percent could not say, 28 percent stated that their abuser had in fact used pornography. 4ukey – password manager 1 0 1 2 exe. Of this 28 percent (women who were aware that their abuser used pornography), 40 percent (or 11 percent of the total group) reported that pornography actually played a role in the abusive incident they experienced. In some cases, the abuser had watched pornography before abusing the woman, in one case he used pornography while committing the abuse, and in yet some other cases he forced his victim to participate in the making of a pornographic film.48)

1) Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls, American Psychological Association, Washington D.C., 2008 at http://www.apa.org/pi/wpo/sexualizationrep.pdf; and: National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy: 'SEX And TECH, Results from a survey of teens and young adults,' Washington D.C., 2008 at http://www.thenationalcampaign.org/SEXTECH/PDF/SexTech_Summary.pdf.
2) Dolf Zillman, Indiana University, Paper prepared for the Surgeon General's Workshop on Pornography and Public Health, Arlington VA, 1986. Available at http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/NN/B/C/K/V/_/nnbckv.pdf. Accessed April 23, 2012.
3) James B. Weaver III, 'The Effects of Pornography Addiction on Families and Communities,' presented before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Washington, D.C. (November 18, 2004), 2, 4.
4) Ven-hwei Lo and Ran Wei, 'Exposure to Internet Pornography and Taiwanese Adolescents' Sexual Attitudes and Behavior,' Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 49, (2005): 221-37 (230); Jochen Peter and Patti M. Valkenburg, 'Adolescents' Exposure to Sexually Explicit Online Material and Recreational Attitudes toward Sex,' Journal of Communication 56, (2006): 639-660 (654).
5) , 15) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 41.
6) , 8) , 16) James B. Weaver III, 'The Effects of Pornography Addiction on Families and Communities,' presented before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Washington, D.C. (November 18, 2004), 3.
7) Elisabet Häggström-Nordin, Ulf Hanson, and Tanja Tydén. 'Associations Between Pornography Consumption and Sexual Practices Among Adolescents in Sweden,' International journal of STD & AIDS 16, no. 2 (2005): 104-5.
9) Judith A. Reisman, 'The Psychopharmacology of Pictorial Pornography Restructuring Brain, Mind & Memory & Subverting Freedom of Speech' 26, (2007). Communication with the author.
10) , 42) , 45) , 47) Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant, 'Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction,' Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, (1988): 439.
11) Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant, 'Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction,' Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, (1988): 448.
12) Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant, 'Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction,' Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, (1988): 450.
13) Ven-hwei Lo and Ran Wei, 'Exposure to Internet Pornography and Taiwanese Adolescents' Sexual Attitudes and Behavior,' Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 49, (2005): 221-37 (233).
14) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 43.
17) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 41-2.
18) L. Monique Ward, 'Does Television Exposure Affect Emerging Adults' Attitudes and Assumptions about Sexual Relationships? Correlational and Experimental Confirmation,' Journal of Youth and Adolescence 31, (2002): 1-15 (12).
19) , 24) Mary Anne Layden, Center for Cognitive Therapy, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania (Testimony for U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, November 18, 2004).
20) Sylvain C. Boies, 'University Students' Uses of and Reactions to Online Sexual Information and Entertainment: Links to Online and Offline Sexual Behavior,' The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality 11, (2002): 77-89 (86).
21) Al Cooper, Nathan Galbreath, and Michael A. Becker, 'Sex on the Internet: Furthering our Understanding of Men with Online Sexual Problems,' Psychology of Addictive Behavior 18, (2004): 226.
22) Nicole Daluga, A Content Analysis of Sexual Risk and Protective Behaviors and Messages in Sexually Explicit Web Pages Viewed by a National Probability Sample of U.S. Adolescents (Atlanta, Georgia: Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University, 2002), 255-279, 19; K.A. Cameron, L.F. Salazar, J.M. Bernhardt, N. Burgess-Whitman, G.M. Wingood, and R.J. DiClemente, 'Adolescents' Experience with Sex on the Web: Results from Online Focus Groups,' Journal of Adolescence 28, (2005): 535-40 (537).
23) Mary Anne Layden, Center for Cognitive Therapy, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania (Testimony for U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation (November 18, 2004).
25) Laramie D. Taylor, 'Effects of Visual and Verbal Sexual Television Content and Perceived Realism on Attitudes and Beliefs,' The Journal of Sex Research 42, (2005): 130-37 (135).
26) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 42
27) Nicole Daluga, A Content Analysis of Sexual Risk and Protective Behaviors and Messages in Sexually Explicit Web Pages Viewed by a National Probability Sample of U.S. Adolescents (Atlanta, Georgia: Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University, 2002), 255-279.
28) Gina M. Wingood, Ralph J. DiClemente, Kathy Harrington, Suzy Davies, Edward W. Hook, and M. Kim Oh, 'Exposure to X-rated Movies and Adolescents' Sexual and Contraceptive-related Attitudes and Behaviors,' Pediatrics 107, (2001): 1116-19.
29) Kristian Daneback, Michael W. Ross, and Sven-Axel Månsson, 'Characteristics and Behaviors of Sexual Compulsives Who Use the Internet for Sexual Purposes,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 13, (2006): 53-67 (59-60).
30) Peter D. Goldberg, Brennan D. Peterson, Karen H. Rosen, and Mary Linda Sara, 'Cybersex: The Impact of a Contemporary Problem on the Practices of Marriage and Family Therapists,' Journal of Marital and Family Therapy 34, (2008): 469-80 (475).
31) A. Cooper, N. Galbreath, and M.A. Becker, 'Sex on the Internet: Furthering Our Understanding of Men with Online Sexual Problems,' Psychology of Addictive Behavior 18, (2004): 223-30 (225).
32) Kristian Daneback, Michael W. Ross, and Sven-Axel Månsson, 'Characteristics and Behaviors of Sexual Compulsives Who Use the Internet for Sexual Purposes,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 13, (2006): 53-67 (59, 61).
33) Donald W. Black, Laura L.D. Kehrberg, Denise L. Flumerfelt, and Steven S. Schlosser, 'Characteristics of 36 Subjects Reporting Compulsive Sexual Behavior,' American Journal of Psychiatry 154, (1997): 243-49 (247).

Liquibid Video Exposure And Effects 1 2 30 Mg

34) Al Cooper, Eric Griffin-Shelley, David L. Delmonico, and Robin M. Mathy, 'Online Sexual Problems: Assessment and Predictive Variables,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 8, (2001): 267-85 (281).
35) Michele L. Ybarra and Kimberly J. Mitchell, 'Exposure to Internet Pornography among Children and Adolescents: A National Survey,' CyberPsychology & Behavior 8, (2005): 473-86 (479).
36) Vanessa Vega and Neil M. Malamuth, 'Predicting Sexual Aggression: The Role of Pornography in the Context of General and Specific Risk Factors,' Aggressive Behavior 33, (2007): 104-17 (109).
37) , 46) Dolf Zillmann, 'Influence of Unrestrained Access to Erotica on Adolescents' and Young Adults' Dispositions toward Sexuality,' Journal of Adolescent Health 27S, (2000): 42.
38) Martin Barron and Michael Kimmel, 'Sexual Violence in Three Pornographic Media: Toward a Sociological Explanation,' The Journal of Sex Research 37, (2000): 161-68 (163-65).
39) Jill C. Manning, 'The Impact of Internet Pornography on Marriage and the Family: A Review of the Research,' Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity 13, (2006): 131-65 (136).
40) N.M. Malamuth, T. Addison, and M. Koss, 'Pornography and Sexual Aggression: Are There Reliable Effects and Can We Understand Them?' Annual Review of Sex Research 11, (2000): 26-94
41) James B. Weaver III, 'The Effects of Pornography Addiction on Families and Communities,' presented before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Washington, D.C. (November 18, 2004), 4.

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43) M. Allen, R. Emmers, L. Gebhardt, and M.A. Giery, 'Exposure to Pornography and Acceptance of Rape Myths,' Journal of Communication 45, (1995): 5–26 (19-20).

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44) 'A Meta-analysis of the Published Research on the Effects of Pornography,' in The Changing Family and Child Development, ed. E. Oddone-Paolucci, M. Genium, and C. Violato (Surrey, United Kingdom: Ashgate Publishing, 2000), 48-59 (51).

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48) Raquel Kennedy Bergen and Kathleen A. Bogle, 'Exploring the Connection between Pornography and Sexual Violence,' Violence and Victims 15, (2000): 227-34 (230-1).
This entry draws heavily from The Effects of Pornography on Individuals, Marriage, Family and Community.




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