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Peer-reviewed Archives of Sexual Behavior (Grubbs, Perry, Wilt & Reid)

Pornography Problems Due to Moral Incongruence: An Integrative Model with a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Cited in 2 Likelier entries (0 risks, 2 decisions).

Used in 2 entries

For each citing entry, the verbatim excerpt and Likelier's calculation notes (how the source's number was converted to the lifetime-probability framing) are shown below. Click through to read the full claim ledger.

  1. [1] Masturbation vs NoFap Decision · action side
    Statistic
    Self-perceived pornography problems — the cluster that includes attempted cessation and distress — are predicted more strongly by moral incongruence (religiosity, moral disapproval) than by use frequency
    “"[Paraphrase from abstract — full text paywalled] Pornography- related problems—particularly feelings of addiction to pornography—may be, in many cases, better construed as functions of discrepancies—moral incongruence—between pornography-related beliefs and pornography-related behaviors. Religiousness and moral disapproval of pornography use consistently predict self-reported addiction and distress, while use frequency is a much weaker predictor."”
    Calculation notes
    Grubbs, Perry, Wilt & Reid (2019), Archives of Sexual Behavior 48(2), 397-415. PMID 30076491. Peer-reviewed meta-analysis. Used as the theoretical scaffolding for why action-side regret rates are bimodal: among religiously-conservative users, regret- equivalent distress is substantially higher than among non- religious users. The 10% headline figure is a population-weighted average that conceals this heterogeneity. Same source is also cited in the porn-use entry; here the focus is on the masturbation overlap.
    

    Source date: 2019-02-01 · Accessed: 2026-05-30

  2. [2] Porn use vs abstain Decision · action side
    Statistic
    Meta-analysis finds self-perceived pornography addiction is more strongly predicted by moral incongruence (the gap between use and beliefs about use) than by use frequency itself
    “"[Paraphrase from abstract — full text paywalled] Pornography- related problems—particularly feelings of addiction to pornography—may be, in many cases, better construed as functions of discrepancies—moral incongruence—between pornography-related beliefs and pornography-related behaviors. The systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates support for this model: religiousness and moral disapproval of pornography use consistently predict self-reported addiction and distress, while use frequency is a much weaker predictor."”
    Calculation notes
    Grubbs, Perry, Wilt & Reid (2019), Archives of Sexual Behavior 48(2), 397-415. PMID 30076491. Peer-reviewed systematic review and meta-analysis. Used here to establish the load-bearing caveat: action-side regret is heavily mediated by religiosity and moral incongruence, not by use frequency. The 9% Barna figure conflates two distinct populations — religious or morally conflicted users with high distress, and non-religious users whose use generates little subjective distress. The Grubbs meta-analysis is theoretical scaffolding for why the headline rate hides population heterogeneity rather than a direct rate measurement.
    

    Source date: 2019-02-01 · Accessed: 2026-05-30