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Profiles of problematic pornography use and religiosity-based moral incongruence using latent profile analysis: a two-sample study

Profiles of problematic pornography use and religiosity-based moral incongruence using latent profile analysis: a two-sample study
Profiles of problematic pornography use and religiosity-based moral incongruence using latent profile analysis: a two-sample study
Background and aims: recent taxonomies propose that pornography-related problems may arise from problematic pornography use (PPU) and/or moral incongruence (MI). Although religiosity is often viewed as a key factor in MI, religious-based MI has not yet been explicitly examined within these taxonomies, which we address herein.

Methods: using latent profile analysis of self-report data obtained, we examined distinct and overlapping profiles of PPU and religiosity-based MI in two online samples of male pornography users from the United States (N = 1,356, Mage = 36.86, SD = 11.26) and United Kingdom (N = 944, Mage = 38.69, SD = 12.26).
Results: Three classes (15–25% of each sample) showed elevated PPU and/or religiosity-based MI: ‘At risk for religiosity-based MI’ (4–8%), ‘At risk for PPU’ (6–10%), and ‘At risk for co-occurring PPU and religiosity-based MI’ (6–8%). Unlike the two groups with elevated PPU, the group with religious-based MI group did not report heightened psychological distress or treatment-seeking tendencies. Respondents were otherwise classified as “not at risk” (40–47%) “low risk” (27–28%), or moderate-severity PPU (14%, Sample 2 only).

Discussion and conclusions: although the observed heterogeneity validates a taxonomy of PPU and religiosity-based MI, our findings challenge the assumption of elevated psychological distress and treatment-seeking tendencies among individuals with religiosity-based MI. Future research should further examine the clinical relevance of religiosity-based MI and extend these findings to broader (e.g., clinical, culturally diverse) samples.
Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder, heterogeneity, latent profile analysis, moral incongruence, pornography addiction, problematic pornography use, self-perceived pornography addiction
2062-5871
1021-1039
Ince, Campbell
68febec4-54a5-49e9-b8e8-050f54778f07
Tiego, Jeggan
43062a3a-5e7d-4b8d-8501-5af8f0d5d921
Albertella, Lucy
e802b70a-7160-424a-9a52-c01927334781
Fontenelle, Leonardo F.
859206be-2b11-438a-9b18-d22579111a6b
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Yucel, Murat
3a9931b3-bc30-47ca-9646-6d6bbea3ec8b
Rotaru, Kristian
61b62f8b-43ce-427c-aeec-cd37778d18bb
Ince, Campbell
68febec4-54a5-49e9-b8e8-050f54778f07
Tiego, Jeggan
43062a3a-5e7d-4b8d-8501-5af8f0d5d921
Albertella, Lucy
e802b70a-7160-424a-9a52-c01927334781
Fontenelle, Leonardo F.
859206be-2b11-438a-9b18-d22579111a6b
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Yucel, Murat
3a9931b3-bc30-47ca-9646-6d6bbea3ec8b
Rotaru, Kristian
61b62f8b-43ce-427c-aeec-cd37778d18bb

Ince, Campbell, Tiego, Jeggan, Albertella, Lucy, Fontenelle, Leonardo F., Chamberlain, Samuel R., Yucel, Murat and Rotaru, Kristian (2025) Profiles of problematic pornography use and religiosity-based moral incongruence using latent profile analysis: a two-sample study. Journal of Behavioral Addictions, 14 (2), 1021-1039. (doi:10.1556/2006.2025.00022).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and aims: recent taxonomies propose that pornography-related problems may arise from problematic pornography use (PPU) and/or moral incongruence (MI). Although religiosity is often viewed as a key factor in MI, religious-based MI has not yet been explicitly examined within these taxonomies, which we address herein.

Methods: using latent profile analysis of self-report data obtained, we examined distinct and overlapping profiles of PPU and religiosity-based MI in two online samples of male pornography users from the United States (N = 1,356, Mage = 36.86, SD = 11.26) and United Kingdom (N = 944, Mage = 38.69, SD = 12.26).
Results: Three classes (15–25% of each sample) showed elevated PPU and/or religiosity-based MI: ‘At risk for religiosity-based MI’ (4–8%), ‘At risk for PPU’ (6–10%), and ‘At risk for co-occurring PPU and religiosity-based MI’ (6–8%). Unlike the two groups with elevated PPU, the group with religious-based MI group did not report heightened psychological distress or treatment-seeking tendencies. Respondents were otherwise classified as “not at risk” (40–47%) “low risk” (27–28%), or moderate-severity PPU (14%, Sample 2 only).

Discussion and conclusions: although the observed heterogeneity validates a taxonomy of PPU and religiosity-based MI, our findings challenge the assumption of elevated psychological distress and treatment-seeking tendencies among individuals with religiosity-based MI. Future research should further examine the clinical relevance of religiosity-based MI and extend these findings to broader (e.g., clinical, culturally diverse) samples.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 21 February 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 March 2025
Published date: 2 July 2025
Keywords: Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder, heterogeneity, latent profile analysis, moral incongruence, pornography addiction, problematic pornography use, self-perceived pornography addiction

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499401
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499401
ISSN: 2062-5871
PURE UUID: 3574410f-d40e-4181-90c6-ab8ac02a0741
ORCID for Samuel R. Chamberlain: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7014-8121

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Date deposited: 18 Mar 2025 18:05
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 03:16

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Contributors

Author: Campbell Ince
Author: Jeggan Tiego
Author: Lucy Albertella
Author: Leonardo F. Fontenelle
Author: Samuel R. Chamberlain ORCID iD
Author: Murat Yucel
Author: Kristian Rotaru

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