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The study concluded that residents of Middletown, USA (Muncie,
Indiana) spend 10 and a half hours a day using media. For around
a quarter of that time, they are using at least two media simultaneously.
Television, at 4.5 hours a day, is the most used medium. It is followed
by computers (2.4 hours), radio (1.9 hours), reading (1 hour), music
(55 minutes), phone (53 minutes), video games (12 minutes) and e-mail
(seven minutes).
An academic team compared reported media use from telephone surveys
and personal diaries to actual, observed use. Researchers followed
101 subjects for an entire day from the time they got up to the
time they went to bed. The researchers found that the group shadowed
spent substantially more time with the media than indicated by more
traditional research methods. The greatest discrepancy was in television
viewership. The closest correlation between reported vs. observed
behavior was in time spent reading. The study suggests self-reporting
may be unreliable and that to be effective, research should measure
more than one medium at a time.
The study also offers new insights into the reported drop in television
viewership among 18 to 34 year old males. The men in this group
observed by the researchers watched less TV than other demographic
groups. They spend more time listening to music, watching videos
and playing video games.
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