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The average person completes 90 online tasks per day – including sorting emails, paying bills, and planning journeys. A poll of 2,000 adults revealed they typically use the internet nine times a ...
Initial Users (22.86%): While these adults did not consider themselves to be addicted, they often realized that they spent more time online than originally planned.
From 2013 to 2017, adults aged 65 and older averaged 4.3 hours of daily television viewing—the highest among age groups—while those aged 25–34 watched the least (just over 2 hours daily). Employment status correlated with viewing habits: employed individuals (full- or part-time) watched approximately 2.2 hours daily, compared to 3.8 hours among the unemployed. As 80.2% of adults over 65 ...
People in Japan spend the least time online daily, three hours, 56 minutes, while those in South Africa spend the most, nine hours, 24 minutes. Between the ages of 18 and 80, that amounts to 10 ...
Childcare: Adults in households with children under 6 spent 2.5 hours daily on primary childcare. Women provided more physical care (1.2 hours) than men (34 minutes).
Screen time is the amount of time spent using an electronic device with a display screen such as a smartphone, computer, television, video game console, or tablet. [1]
In 2015, the International Telecommunication Union estimated about 3.2 billion people, or almost half of the world's population, would be online by the end of the year. Of them, about 2 billion would be from developing countries, including 89 million from least developed countries. [1][2] According to Hootsuite, the number of Global Internet users has already reached almost 5 billion, or about ...
A nationally representative study of American 12th graders funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse titled Monitoring the Future Survey found that "teens who spent more time than average on screen activities are more likely to be unhappy, and those who spend more time than average on non-screen activities are more likely to be happy." [55]