| Literature DB >> 36005215 |
Krystelle Shaughnessy1, Cassandra J Fehr1, Marilyn Ashley1, Justine Braham1, Patrick R Labelle2, Allison J Ouimet1, Serena Corsini-Munt1, Andrea R Ashbaugh1, Elke D Reissing1.
Abstract
Technology-mediated sexual interactions (TMSI) are interpersonal exchanges via technology of self-created sexual material, including photos, videos, and auditory or text messages. There is little research on the factors that predict both TMSI experiences and their sexual wellbeing outcomes. Social anxiety is anxiety experienced in response to social or performance situations. From a cognitive-behavioural perspective, people higher in social anxiety may avoid TMSI, preventing positive or negative consequences. They also may use TMSI to avoid the anxiety caused by in-person sexual interactions, benefiting from access to sexual interactions while perpetuating anxiety about them. The purpose of this scoping review was to explore the role of social anxiety in TMSI and its sexual wellbeing outcomes. We executed a comprehensive search strategy across eight academic databases and searched reference lists of included articles. We included 19 articles written in English or French that had a human sample and were published between 1991 and 2021 and evaluated connections between social anxiety constructs (e.g., shyness, anxiety) and TMSI-related experiences (e.g., sexting, internet sex addiction). The pattern of results suggested that social anxiety constructs may predict some but not all forms of TMSI. Future research from a cognitive-behavioural perspective will expand knowledge on social anxiety, TMSI, and its sexual wellbeing outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; cybersex; non-consensual; partner-seeking; scoping review; sexting; sexual wellbeing; shyness; social anxiety; technology-mediated sexual interactions
Year: 2022 PMID: 36005215 PMCID: PMC9407275 DOI: 10.3390/ejihpe12080066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Investig Health Psychol Educ ISSN: 2174-8144
Figure 1PRISMA diagram for scoping review method.
Summary of study characteristics for included articles.
| Study Characteristics | ||
|---|---|---|
| Date of Publication | ||
| 1995 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2007 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2008 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2012 | 1 (5.26) | |
| 2013 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2014 | 2 (10.53%) | |
| 2015 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2016 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2017 | 2 (10.53%) | |
| 2018 | 1 (5.26%) | |
| 2019 | 5 (26.3%) | |
| 2020 | 2 (10.53%) | |
| Age | ||
| Children (<13) | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Teenagers Only (13–17) | 4 (21.05%) | |
| Emerging Adults Only (18–29) | 6 (31.58%) | |
| Adults Only (>29) | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Emerging Adults—Adults (18+) | 4 (21.05%) | |
| Not Reported | 3 (15.79%) | |
| Gender | ||
| Only Men (Cis/Trans Not Specified) | 3 (15.79%) | |
| Only Women (Cis/Trans Not Specified) | 0 (0%) | |
| Both Men and Women (Cis/Trans Not Specified) | 15 (78.95%) | |
| Not Reported | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Sexual Identity | ||
| Only Heterosexual People | 2 (10.53%) | |
| Only Sexual Minoritized Men | 2 (10.53%) | |
| Only Sexual Minoritized Women | 0 (0%) | |
| Heterosexual and Sexual Minoritized People | 4 (21.05%) | |
| Not Reported | 11 (57.89%) | |
| Country | ||
| USA | 9 (39.13%) | |
| Canada | 2 (8.70%) | |
| Australia | 2 (8.70%) | |
| Belgium | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Bosnia | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Finland | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Germany | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Herzegovina | 1 (4.35%) | |
| India | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Serbia | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Spain | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Sweden | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Switzerland | 1 (4.35%) | |
| Ethnic Majority (i.e., >50% of sample) | ||
| White/Caucasian | 6 (31.58%) | |
| German | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Hispanic | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Mixed Ethnicities | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Not Reported | 10 (52.63%) | |
| Study Design | ||
| Cross-Sectional | 15 (78.95%) | |
| Longitudinal | 2 (10.53%) | |
| Qualitative | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Mixed Methods | 1 (5.26%) | |
| Type of Anxiety | ||
| Anxiety | 8 (38.10%) | |
| Generalized Anxiety | 2 (9.52%) | |
| Shyness | 4 (19.05%) | |
| Social Anxiety | 7 (33.33%) | |
Note. n = 19; not all percentages may total 100% due to studies being included more than once (e.g., including two samples from different countries) and rounding; three studies were conducted in more than one country; two studies measured more than one type of anxiety.
Summary of the codes, categories, and findings in the included studies.
| Citation | Type of Study | Type of Anxiety | Type of Technology | Technology Category | Summary of Findings | Pattern in Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beyens and Eggermont, 2014 | Cross-sectional Survey | Social Anxiety | Cybersex Text and Visual, + Dating Partner, Friend, and Stranger | TMSI-related | Social anxiety did not predict prevalence of text-based sexually arousing online conversations. | No SA- and TMSI-related association |
| Lower social anxiety predicted prevalence of visual cybersex with dating partner, particularly for boys, and visual cybersex with stranger for gay, lesbian, or bisexual youth. | SA increases predict less TMSI-related | |||||
| Kim, Martin-Storey, Drossos, Barbosa, and Georgiades, 2019 | Cross-sectional Survey | Social Anxiety | Sexting-Visual | TMSI-related | As social anxiety disorder symptoms decreased, odds of sending and receiving sexts increased. | SA increases predict less TMSI-related |
| Generalized Anxiety | Generalized anxiety symptoms did not significantly predict sending or receiving. | No anxiety and TMSI-related association | ||||
| Schulz, Bergen, Schuhmann, and Hoyer, 2017 | Cross-sectional Survey | Social Anxiety | Cybersex Stranger + Minors | Non-consensual TMSI | Participants who interacted or attempted to interact sexually online with minors they did not know reported higher social anxiety than those who sexually interacted with adults they did not know, followed by those with no online sexual contact with strangers, and participants soliciting adolescents reported higher social anxiety than those soliciting adults online. | Non-consensual TMSI-related coincides with greater SA |
| Coduto, Lee-Won, and Baek, 2019 | Cross-sectional Survey | Social Anxiety | Partner-seeking-compulsive | Problematic TMSI-related | Social anxiety positively correlated with preference for online social interactions via online dating applications and with compulsive use of dating apps. | SA increases predict more problematic TMSI-related |
| Increases in social anxiety predicted negative outcomes from dating app use because of greater compulsive use of dating apps. For those high in loneliness, social anxiety predicts preference for online dating applications, which predicts compulsive use of dating apps, which in turn predicts more negative outcomes. | SA increases predict more negative outcomes of problematic TMSI-related | |||||
| Marmet, Studer, Wicki, Bertholet, Khazaal, and Gmel, 2019 | Cross-sectional Survey | Social Anxiety | Internet Sex Addiction | Problematic TMSI-related | Internet sex addiction explained 1.47% of the 18.35% of the variance in the severity of SAD that was explained by the co-occurrence of behavioural addictions. This means that internet sex addiction partially explains variance in social anxiety disorder. | Problematic TMSI-related predicts greater SA |
| Bodroza and Jovanovic, | Cross-sectional Survey | Social Anxiety | Sex/Partner-seeking | Partner-seeking TMSI | Social anxiety predicts higher scores on the factor called “socializing and seeking sexual partners on Facebook“. | SA increases predict more partner-seeking |
| Ross, Rosser, McCurdy, and Feldman, 2007 | Mixed-Methods | Social Anxiety/ | Sex/Partner-seeking | Partner-seeking TMSI | Theme: avoidance of interpersonal contact is one of most commonly occurring themes for MSM who prefer meeting potential sex partners online. | SA/Shyness increases coincide with more partner-seeking |
| Scharlott and Christ, 1995 | Cross-sectional Survey | Shyness | Sex/Partner-seeking | Partner-seeking TMSI | Participants high in shyness were more likely to use online computer-mediated matchmaking services to find a romantic or sexual relationship. | Shyness increases coincide with more partner-seeking |
| Sanders, 2008 | Qualitative | Shyness | Sex/Partner-seeking | Partner-seeking TMSI | The theme of socializing and overcoming personal shyness: described interviewees reporting their own shyness or introversion repeatedly emphasized M4M spaces helping to initiate social and sexual interactions. | Shyness increases coincide with more partner-seeking |
| Appel, Marker, and Mara, 2019 | Cross-sectional scenario-based survey | Shyness (Otakuism) | Sex Robots | Partner-seeking TMSI | For men, higher shyness predicted greater intentions to use/purchase a sex robot. | Shyness increases predict more partner-seeking |
| For women, shyness did not predict sex robot behavioural intentions. | No shyness and TMSI-related association | |||||
| Englander, 2012 | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting + Coercive | Non-consensual TMSI | Participants who reported that they were pressured to sext during highschool were more likely to report excessive anxiety at that time than non-pressured sexters. | Non-consensual TMSI-related coincides with greater anxiety |
| Gordon-Messer, D., Bauermeister, J. A., Grodzinski, A., and Zimmerman, M | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting—Visual | TMSI-related | No differences between nonsexters, two-way sexters, and receivers (only) in anxiety. | No anxiety and TMSI-related association |
| Temple, Le, van den Berg, Ling, Paul, and Temple, 2014 | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting—Visual | TMSI-related | Sexting (yes/no) did not predict anxiety symptoms. | No anxiety and TMSI-related association |
| Klettke, Mellor, Silva-Myles, Clancy, and Sharma, | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting—Visual | TMSI-related | Although participants who reported greater anxiety symptoms were more likely to sext at the bivariate level, anxiety did not predict sexting when controlling for sociodemographic factors and accounting for depression and stress scores. | No anxiety and TMSI-related association |
| Klettke, Hallford, Clancy, Mellor, and Toumbourou, | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting-Visual + Coercive | TMSI-related | Participants who had received unwanted sexts or sexted under coercion reported more anxiety symptoms than those who had not experienced unwanted/coerced sexting. | Non-consensual TMSI-related coincides with greater anxiety |
| Non-consensual TMSI | Participants who had ever sexted did not differ from those who had never sexted on anxiety. | No anxiety and TMSI-related association | ||||
| Dodaj, Sesar, and Jerinic, 2020 | Longitudinal Survey | Anxiety | Sexting—Text, Visual, Audio | TMSI-related | Participants who sent sexts overall reported more psychological difficulties than those who did not (including anxiety). | TMSI-related sending is associated with greater anxiety |
| Participants who received sexts at time 1 had more anxiety than those who received sexts at time 2. | TMSI-related receiving is associated with greater anxiety | |||||
| Anxiety at times 1 or 2 did not predict sending or receiving sexts at times 1 or 2. | No anxiety predicting TMSI-related | |||||
| Gassó, Mueller-Johnson, and Montiel, 2020 | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting-Visual + Coercive | TMSI-related; | Women who had any of these experiences were more likely to report anxiety: sent and received, received only, were victims of non-consensual dissemination, pressured to sext, and threatened to sext. | TMSI-related coincides with greater anxiety |
| TMSI-related | Men’s sexting experiences were not associated with anxiety. | No anxiety and TMSI-related association | ||||
| Chaudhary, Peskin, Temple, Addy, Baumler, and Ross, 2017 | Longitudinal Survey | Generalized Anxiety | Sexting—Text, Visual + Send, Receive | TMSI-related | Sixth-grade youth who reported sexting had greater odds of having anxiety symptoms and had greater odds of having anxiety symptoms at time 2 when they were in grade 7. | TMSI-related predicts greater anxiety |
| Drouin, Ross, and Tobin, 2015 | Cross-sectional Survey | Anxiety | Sexting—Text, Visual + Coercive with Partner | Non-consensual TMSI | Men and women who reported greater sexting coercion in their current or most recent relationship also reported higher anxiety symptoms, with the effect being stronger in men. | Non-consensual TMSI-related coincides with greater anxiety |
Note: TMSI-related = cybersex or sexting that is consensual or instructions in measure are general; Non-consensual TMSI = cybersex or sexting that is unwanted, coerced, pressured, threatened, or between adults and minors; problematic TMSI-related = compulsive or addictive online dating or sex; partner-seeking TMSI = using online platforms to find sex or romantic partners that may or may not include having cybersex or sexting, or using sex robots.