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Toddlers getting more tablet use: study
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 28, 2013


Smartphones boost sharing of photos, videos: survey
Washington (AFP) Oct 28, 2013 - Smartphones are giving a big boost to posting of photos and videos, according to a study released Monday.

The Pew Research Center survey found 54 percent of US Internet users now post original pictures or videos online, up from 46 percent last year.

And 47 percent repost images or videos they discover online, the survey found.

Much of this growth came from people using smartphone apps like Instagram or Snapchat, according to Pew researchers.

This survey found that 92 percent of Americans own a cell phone and 58 percent own a smartphone. Some 18 percent of cell phone owners use Instagram and nine percent use Snapchat to share images or videos.

"Sharing photos and videos online adds texture, play, and drama to people's interactions in their social networks," said Pew Internet's Maeve Duggan, author of the report.

"This all adds up to a new kind of collective digital scrapbook with fresh forms of storytelling and social bonding."

Women are more active sharers than men, according to the survey: Some 59 percent of online women post photos and videos they have taken themselves, compared with 50 percent of men.

Likewise, 53 percent of women share some of the content they found elsewhere, compared with 42 percent of men.

Among those in the 18-29 age group, 81 percent have uploaded original content and 68 percent have reposted photos or videos.

Some 26 percent of cell owners in this age group use Snapchat, while 43 percent use Instagram.

"A lot of photo- and video-sharing is happening on social media, where women are historically more likely to be users," said Duggan.

"In terms of mobile, young people have always been early and eager adopters of new apps and platforms for sharing," she added.

The craze for tablets and smartphones is spreading to ever younger users.

A new study of American households found 38 percent of toddlers and infants under the age of two have used a mobile device such as a tablet or smartphone, compared to 10 percent in 2011.

The study by Common Sense Media said young children up to age eight still spend more time with "traditional" screen media such as TV, DVDs, computers, and video games, but that this is shifting .

Overall screen time is down by 21 minutes, with mobile time up 10 minutes, the study found. Viewing on a television set still makes up half of all screen time.

"This is quite an extraordinary shift for our young children," said James Steyer, chief executive and founder of Common Sense Media.

"In the past we could measure and control exactly where, when, and how they were engaging with screens. Now, mobile devices follow our kids from room to room," he said.

"The media children consume can have a profound impact on their learning, social development, and behavior, and the only way to maximize the positive impact -- and minimize the negative -- is to have an accurate understanding of the role it plays in their lives. These kids are true digital natives."

The average amount of time children spend using mobile devices has tripled, from five minutes a day to 15 minutes a day for the zero-to-eight age group, the study found, and the number of kids who have used mobile devices has nearly doubled from 38 to 72 percent.

"I've never seen a new medium take hold among little kids this fast," said researcher Vicky Rideout. "As many little babies and one-year-olds have used smartphones or tablets today as all kids under eight had done just two years ago."

The most common mobile media activity among children is playing games, cited by 63 percent of parents. And parents also said 30 percent of kids used these devices for reading.

The study found educational TV is the most popular screen activity among young children, with 61 percent watching some programming.

On average, children in this age group read or are read to for just under half an hour a day, roughly the same as in 2011.

The report is based on a survey of 1,463 parents of children age eight and under including an "over-sample" of African-American and Latino parents from May 20 to June 12.

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