Lenhart, A.; Purcell, K.; Smith, Aaron; and Zickuhr. February 3, 2010. Social Media and Mobile Internet Use Among Teens and Young Adults The Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life project studies behavior and attitudes toward mobile phones and highlights the generation of teens and young adults who use mobile phones. mobile phones, an environment between 18 -29- years. This project conducted up to 100 surveys and wrote up to 200 reports on teens and Internet use, as Lenhart, Purcell, Smith, and Zickuhr explained in the research. She also reported with other colleagues how their findings on social media and Internet use among older children compared to data among adolescents and older children. Lenhart's current data draws a hypothesis led by this study: This research began between June and August on 800 adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 who use cell phones as a source of how they behave online more than they do in the world real. do they behave online more than in the real world when it comes to social media? According to this research, approximately 93% of adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 communicate more often online than in real life, so in comparison adults are no less likely to be online in September 2009. In December 2009, Lenhart said that 74 percent of adults communicate with friends on the Internet. Geser, H. (2004). Towards a sociological theory of the mobile phone. Retrieved July 12, 2005, from http://socio.ch/mobile/t_geser1.pdfOne of the main functional reasons for mobile phone use is the functionality of their life and concerns. During adolescence, time transcends family boundaries and generates networks with peers and classmates. Geser suggests that... half of the article... Matics and Computer Science, 20, 349-364. Print.This short review explains that in recent years, wireless devices such as phones, pagers, and PCs have become more popular than any other device among users with experience in how to use them. For example, cell phone subscribers in the United States have increased dramatically, from 109 million in 2000 to 148.6 million in 2002, according to eMarketer research (LetsTalk cell phone survey, 2002); Aoki and Downes explained that the article's introduction highlights the rise of cell phones. To test the purpose of how Americans own cell phones and create their own interest in the technology, Aoki and Downes use data from Joseph P. Schackner's 2002 Scarborough Research study. Studies on the social impacts of cell phones they produced no results. enough information about cell phones and it had been that way until a few years ago.
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