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Books or Nooks?
How Americans’ reading habits
 are shifting in a digital world

       Kristen Purcell, Ph.D.
    Associate Director, Research
       Pew Internet Project

       Ocean County Library
      Staff Development Day
           May 18, 2012
• Part of the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan “fact tank” based
  in Washington, DC

• PRC’s mission is to provide high quality, objective data to thought
  leaders and policymakers

• Data for this talk is from nationally representative telephone
  surveys of U.S. adults and teens (on landlines and cell phones)

• Presentation slides and all data are available at pewinternet.org
About our libraries research…
• Study the changing role of public libraries and library users in
  the digital age
• Funded by a three-year, $1.4 million grant from the Bill and
  Melinda Gates Foundation
• More information available at libraries.pewinternet.org
The Internet:
Then and Now
Internet Use in the U.S. in 2000
                                         Slow, stationary connections
  46% of US adults used the internet        built around a desktop
                                                   computer
 5% had home broadband connections

       53% owned a cell phone

  0% connected to internet wirelessly

     0% used social network sites
             _________________________




Information flowed mainly one way
 Information consumption was a
       stationary activity
The Internet in 2012
                                        Mobile devices have
82% of US adults use the internet    fundamentally changed the
                                        relationship between
  2/3 have broadband at home        information, time and space
88% have a cell phone; 46% are          Information is now
      smartphone users              portable, participatory, and
                                             personal
  19% have a tablet computer
     19% have an e-reader
 2/3 are wireless internet users
 65% of online adults use SNS
Internet adoption, 1995-2011
% of American adults (age 18+) who use the internet, over time.
      As of August 2011, 78% of adults use the internet.




    Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project Surveys, March 2000-August 2011.
The main reasons non-internet users
                          do not use the internet
In May 2010, 21% of American adults age 18+ did not use the internet. (This number is 22% as of August 2011.) When asked
the main reason they do not go online (in their own words), these are the factors they cite.

                                                                                                           % of offline adults

What is the MAIN reason you don't use the internet or email?
Just not interested                                                                                                 31%
Don't have a computer                                                                                               12
Too expensive                                                                                                       10
Too difficult                                                                                                        9
It's a waste of time                                                                                                 7
Don't have access                                                                                                    6
Don't have time to learn                                                                                             6
Too old to learn                                                                                                     4
Don’t want/need it                                                                                                   4
Just don't know how                                                                                                  2
Physically unable                                                                                                    2
Worried about viruses/spyware/spam                                                                                   1
Other                                                                                                                6
Source: Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, April 29-May 30, 2010 Tracking Survey. N=2,252 adults 18 and older
(n=496 for non-internet users).
GADGETS
Adult gadget ownership over time (2006-2012)
          % of American adults age 18+ who own each device




                 Source: Pew Internet surveys, 2006-2012
Gadget ownership snapshot for adults age 18+
              % of American adults age 18+ who own each device




       Source: The Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project surveys.
Mobile is the Needle: 88% of US Adults Have a Cell Phone

    % in each age group who have a cell phone
                                                 46% of US adults now
                                                 own SMARTPHONES,
                                                    up from 35% in
                                                     Spring 2011

                                                 Highest rates among:
                                                 18-24 year-olds (67%)
                                                 25-34 year-olds (71%)

                                                23% of all teens age 12-
                                                 17 have a smartphone

                                                 31% of 14-17 year-olds
                                                  have a smartphone,
                                                compared with just 8% of
 Teen data July 2011      Adult data Feb 2012
                                                    12-13 year-olds
Overall, if you had to use one single word to describe how you feel about
              your cell phone, what would that one word be?
Smartphone ownership by age & income/education
% of adults within each group who own a smartphone (for example, 58% of 18-29 year olds with a household income of less
than $30,000 per year are smartphone owners)



                                                                          18-29               30-49              50-64              65+
                                                                         (n=336)             (n=601)            (n=639)           (n=626)

All adults                                                                  66%                 59%               34%                13%

Annual Household Income

Less than $30,000                                                            58                  42                 16                 5

$30,000 or more                                                              72                  69                 44                27

Educational Attainment

High school grad or less                                                     63                  43                 22                 8

Some college or college graduate                                             70                  71                 44                20


Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project January 20-February 19, 2012 tracking survey. N=2,253 adults age 18 and older,
including 901 interviews conducted on respondent’s cell phone. Interviews conducted in both English and Spanish.
Gadgets Teens Use to Access the Internet

      In the last 30 days, have you used the internet on ____?
                   % of all teens age 12-17 who used this gadget in past 30 days to access the internet


        Desktop or laptop
                                                                                                                  88%
               computer


                   Cell phone                                                   49


      Mp3 player or iPod                                           34


             Game console                                     30


Tablet computer or iPad                          16

                                      0                 20                 40                 60                 80                100
Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, April 19 – July 14, 2011 Teen Survey. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parent or
 guardian. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone, and included an oversample of minority families.
Tablet and E-reader Use is on the Rise

            •   29% of US adults own a specialized device
                for e-reading (either a tablet or an e-
                reader)
                  – 19% of adults own an e-book reader
                  – 19% of adults own a tablet computer

            •   E-book reader and tablet ownership are
                strongly correlated with income and
                education, and these devices are most
                popular with adults under age 50

            •   Women are more likely than men to own e-
                readers, and parents are more likely than
                non-parents to own tablets
What Kind of e-Reader Do You Own?



                               Percent of
                            e-reader owners
                                age 18+
                             who own each
                             type of e-book
                                 reader
What is the main reason you do not currently
                   have an e-reader?
Just don't need one/don’t want one                                                 24%          % of Americans
Cost/can’t afford it                                                               19               age 16+
Prefer books/print                                                                 16           who do not own
Don’t read/no time to read                                                         10
                                                                                                   an e-book
Don’t know what an e-reader is                                                      5
                                                                                                reader who cite
Don’t want to learn tech/don’t know how to use it                                   4
Have enough other devices/use other devices                                         3             each reason
Plan to get one/waiting for better features                                         3
Have iPad/tablet                                                                    3
Lack of time in general                                                             2            85% of those
I’m too old                                                                         2
                                                                                                who do not own
Vision/health problems                                                             <1
                                                                                                  an e-book
Other                                                                               3
Don’t know/refused                                                                  5
                                                                                                reader have no
                                                                                                   plans to
Dec. 2011 results are from a survey of 2,986 people age 16 and older conducted November 16-      purchase one
December 21, 2011 conducted in English and Spanish on landline and cell phones. The margin of
error is +/- 2 percentage points. N for non-owners of e-reading devices=2,290.
What Kind of Tablet Computer Do You Own?



                                  Percent of
                                tablet owners
                                   age 18+
                                who own each
                                type of tablet
                                  computer
What is the main reason you do not currently
                   have a tablet computer?
Just don't need one/don’t want one                                               35%
                                                                                                % of Americans
Cost/can’t afford it                                                             25
Have enough devices/happy with current devices                                   20
                                                                                                     age 16+
Don’t want to learn tech/don’t know how to use it                                 7             who do not own
Don’t know what a tablet computer is                                              2                  a tablet
Plan to get one/waiting for better features                                       2              computer who
I’m too old                                                                       2             cite each reason
Lack of time in general                                                           1
Don’t read/no time to read                                                       <1
Vision/health problems                                                           <1              81% of those
Prefer books/print                                                               <1
                                                                                                who do not own
Prefer to use library                                                            <1
                                                                                                    a tablet
Other                                                                             2
Don’t know/refused                                                                3
                                                                                                computer have
                                                                                                  no plans to
Dec. 2011 results are from a survey of 2,986 people age 16 and older conducted November 16-
December 21, 2011 conducted in English and Spanish on landline and cell phones. The margin of
                                                                                                 purchase one
error is +/- 2 percentage points. N for non-owners of tablet computers=2,290.
WHAT WE DO WITH OUR GADGETS
Mobile is the Needle
               That Weaves Information Throughout Our World
% of US adult cell owners who use their phones to…
Cell Phone Activities by Race/Ethnicity
% of adult cell phone owners age 18+ within each group who do the following activities with their cell phone
                                                                                                  Black, non-
                                                                      White, non-Hispanic          Hispanic                Hispanic
                                                                           (n=1343)                 (n=232)                (n=196)
Send or receive text messages                                                  70                     76                     83*
Take a picture                                                                 71                     70                     79*
Access the internet                                                            39                     56*                    51*
Send a photo or video to someone                                               52                     58                     61*
Send or receive email                                                          34                     46*                    43*
Download an app                                                                28                     36*                    36*
Play a game                                                                    31                     43*                    40*
Play music                                                                     27                     45*                    47*
Record a video                                                                 30                     41*                    42*
Access a social networking site                                                25                     39*                    35*
Watch a video                                                                  21                     33*                    39*
Post a photo or video online                                                   18                     30*                    28*
Check bank balance or do online banking                                        15                     27*                    25*


*indicates statistically significant differences compared with whites.
Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, April 26 – May 22, 2011 Spring Tracking Survey. n=2,277 adults ages 18
and older, including 755 cell phone interviews. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.
How Phones Function In Our Lives
% of US adult cell owners who had done each of the following in the past 30 days…
Using Phones for Real-Time Information
     % of cell owners in each age group who have performed these real-time activities in the previous 30 days

                                                                                                                60%
                                                                                                 45
              Coordinate a gathering                                          27
                                                                         23

                                                                                                        49%
                                                                                          39
       Solve an unexpected problem                                            26
                                                              15

     Decide whether or not to visit a                                                                 43%
                                                                                         37
                                                                   18
       business, such as restaurant                      12

     Look up something to settle an                                                                   45%
                                                                                    31
                         argument                             15                                                    18-29         30-49
                                                  4

                                                                                          33%
                Look up sports score                         14
                                                                                   29                               50-64         65+
                                                    5

Get up-to-the minute traffic or public                                                   31%
                                                                         23
                                                        11
                           transit info           4
                                                                              21%
                                                                        21
 Get help in an emergency situation                             18
                                                              16

                                               0%                       20%                    40%            60%           80%           100%

                       Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Mobile Survey, March 15-April 3, 2012.
Apps: From Superhighway to Bypass

One in three US adults download apps to a cell phone or tablet computer

                            Apps provide direct connections to information

                            % of app downloaders who have downloaded each type of app…




    App downloading
    is highest among
  young adults age 18-29         Based on August 2011 Pew Internet Tracking Survey
Apps, Geolocation and Augmented Reality
Social Networks are the Threads That Connect Us

65% of US adults use social
     networking sites
 Consistent rates across gender,
race/ethnicity, and income groups
Why We Use Social Networks
Social Networks and Social Cohesion
                         For networked individuals, information is embedded
A Pew study finds that
 contrary to fears the                      and ambient
   internet isolates
       people...


• Facebook users
are more trusting
than other adults

• Facebook users
 have more close
   relationships

• Facebook users
 get more social
   support than
   other adults
Given So Many Choices, How do Teens Communicate?

 The volume of
teen texting has
   risen from
  50 texts a day
    in 2009 to
  60 texts a day
      in 2012
 for the median
   teen texter


Just 6% of teens
 use email daily,
  while 39% say
 they never use
      email
Search and Information Gathering
   Over time, search has remained one of the most popular internet activities
                           % of adult internet users who engage in each activity online




Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project tracking surveys, 2002-2012. Social network site use
  not tracked prior to February, 2005. “Get news online” and “buy a product online” have not yet been asked in 2012.
Who Uses Search?
All online adults                                                     91%
                                                                                                 % of online adults in each group
Race/Ethnicity                                                                                       who use search engines
White                                                                 93*
African American                                                      89*
Hispanic                                                              79                         While the vast majority
Age
18-29                                                                 96*
                                                                                                  of internet users use
30-49                                                                 91                             search engines,
50-64                                                                 92                           some demographic
65+                                                                   80                         groups are less likely
Education
Some high school                                                      78
                                                                                                      than others to
High school                                                           88*                             use search….
Some college                                                          94*
College graduate                                                      95*                         This includes online
Household income
< $30,000                                                             84
                                                                                                   adults age 65+ and
$30,000 - $49,999                                                     93*                         those in the lowest
$50,000 - $74,999                                                     97*                        education and income
$75,000+                                                              95*                             categories.
*Denotes statistically significant difference with other rows in that category
Source: Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Tracking Survey, Jan 20-Feb 19,
2012. N=2,253 adults age 18 and older. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
Internet users are turning to search engines more frequently

                % of adult search users who use a search engine….
                                                                                                              Daily use of search
                                                                                                           engines is most common
                                                                                                            among younger, more
                                                                                                              educated and more
                                                                                                            affluent internet users.

                                                                                                           60% of internet users age
                                                                                                             18-49 are daily search
                                                                                                           users v. 40% of those 50+

                                                                                                             70% of internet users
                                                                                                           who have graduated from
                                                                                                            college are daily search
                                                                                                             users v. 36% of those
                                                                                                             who have never been
Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Tracking Survey, Jan 20-Feb 19, 2012.
                                                                                                                   to college
             N=2,253 adults, age 18 and older. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
         An asterisk (*) indicates a significant difference across years at the .95 confidence level.
Most adult search users have faith in the
                       fairness and accuracy of results
In general, do you think Internet search engines are a fair and unbiased source of information, or do you think
search engines are NOT a fair and unbiased source?




In general, how much of the information you find using search engines do you think is accurate or
trustworthy?




Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Winter 2012 Tracking Survey, January 20-February 19, 2012. N=2,253
              adults, age 18 and older, including 901 cell phone interviews. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
Most adult search engine users say the relevance and quality of
                results are improving over time

Overall, in your experience, are search engine results getting MORE relevant and useful over time, LESS relevant
and useful, or have you not seen any real difference over time?




Overall, in your experience, is the QUALITY of the information you get using search engines getting BETTER over
time, WORSE over time, or have you not seen any real difference?




 Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Winter 2012 Tracking Survey, January 20-February 19, 2012. N=2,253 adults, age 18 and
                                 older, including 901 cell phone interviews. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
READING IN AMERICA



    Books
      or
    Nooks?
Library Research Timeline…Stage I (August 2011-July 2012)
  • Focus on libraries and new technologies
  • The Rise of E-Reading - Published
     – Special focus on reading habits of e-reader and tablet
        owners
  • E-books and libraries - June 2012
     – Stories/quotes from library staff and patrons
  • Library use in different community types (forthcoming)
  • The habits of younger library users (forthcoming)
First report: The rise of e-reading

 21% of American adults read an
     e-book in the last year
      68% read a print book
  11% listened to an audiobook
Overall, just 19% of adults say they
 read NO books in the past year,
            in any format
Book reading by age
          % of each age group who have read a book in whole or in part in the past 12 months




Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Reading Habits Survey, November 16-December 21, 2011. N=2,986
respondents age 16 and older. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cells. The margin of error
for the sample is +/- 2 percentage points.
What do you like MOST about reading?
% of adult book readers (age 18+) using this format on an average
Theday, as offormat used by readers on any given day
    book June 2010 and December 2011                                                       is
                               shifting over time
       % of adult book readers (age 18+) who use each of these formats on an average day




                                Source: Pew Research Center Surveys.
Who are the readers behind the screens?

Readers of e-books are more likely
than other readers to be:
• Under age 50
• College educated
• Living in households earning $50K+

Other key characteristics:
• They read more books, more often,
  and for a wider range of reasons
• More likely to buy than borrow
On what gadgets do e-readers read their books?
    % of e-book readers age 16 and older who read e-books on each type of device
Which is better – print or e-book?

Asked of those16+ who have read both e-books and print books in last 12 months
When you want to read a particular e-book, where
               do you look first?
      % of e-book readers age 16+ who look first to each source
Some Takeaways for Libraries
Additional takeaways for librarians
           • The gadget doesn’t make the reader,
             but it may change the reader
           • 41% of tablet owners and 35% of e-
             reader owners said they are reading
             more since the advent of e-content
           • A majority of print readers (54%) and
             e-book readers (61%) prefer to
             purchase their own copies of books
           • Most audiobook listeners (61%)
             prefer to borrow their audiobooks
Library Research Timeline…Stage II (May-November 2012)
 • Focus on the changing world of library services
 • The evolving role of libraries in communities
    – New library services
    – People’s expectations of libraries
    – “The library of the future”
 • The role of libraries in the lives of special populations
    – Lower-income users, minorities, rural residents, seniors
Library Research Timeline…Stage III (Sept 2012–April 2013)
  • Library User Typology
     – Different user “types” based on:
        • Characteristics of respondent’s local library
        • How respondent uses the library
        • Respondent’s attitudes about libraries in general
  • An updated, in-depth portrait of young library users
All data available at:
            pewinternet.org
       libraries.pewinternet.org
            Kristen Purcell, Ph.D.
           Associate Director, Research
Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project


    kpurcell@pewinternet.org
                   Twitter:
                @pewinternet
                @kristenpurcell

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Books or Nooks? How Americans’ reading habits are shifting in a digital world

  • 1. Books or Nooks? How Americans’ reading habits are shifting in a digital world Kristen Purcell, Ph.D. Associate Director, Research Pew Internet Project Ocean County Library Staff Development Day May 18, 2012
  • 2. • Part of the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan “fact tank” based in Washington, DC • PRC’s mission is to provide high quality, objective data to thought leaders and policymakers • Data for this talk is from nationally representative telephone surveys of U.S. adults and teens (on landlines and cell phones) • Presentation slides and all data are available at pewinternet.org
  • 3. About our libraries research… • Study the changing role of public libraries and library users in the digital age • Funded by a three-year, $1.4 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation • More information available at libraries.pewinternet.org
  • 5. Internet Use in the U.S. in 2000 Slow, stationary connections 46% of US adults used the internet built around a desktop computer 5% had home broadband connections 53% owned a cell phone 0% connected to internet wirelessly 0% used social network sites _________________________ Information flowed mainly one way Information consumption was a stationary activity
  • 6. The Internet in 2012 Mobile devices have 82% of US adults use the internet fundamentally changed the relationship between 2/3 have broadband at home information, time and space 88% have a cell phone; 46% are Information is now smartphone users portable, participatory, and personal 19% have a tablet computer 19% have an e-reader 2/3 are wireless internet users 65% of online adults use SNS
  • 7. Internet adoption, 1995-2011 % of American adults (age 18+) who use the internet, over time. As of August 2011, 78% of adults use the internet. Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project Surveys, March 2000-August 2011.
  • 8. The main reasons non-internet users do not use the internet In May 2010, 21% of American adults age 18+ did not use the internet. (This number is 22% as of August 2011.) When asked the main reason they do not go online (in their own words), these are the factors they cite. % of offline adults What is the MAIN reason you don't use the internet or email? Just not interested 31% Don't have a computer 12 Too expensive 10 Too difficult 9 It's a waste of time 7 Don't have access 6 Don't have time to learn 6 Too old to learn 4 Don’t want/need it 4 Just don't know how 2 Physically unable 2 Worried about viruses/spyware/spam 1 Other 6 Source: Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, April 29-May 30, 2010 Tracking Survey. N=2,252 adults 18 and older (n=496 for non-internet users).
  • 10. Adult gadget ownership over time (2006-2012) % of American adults age 18+ who own each device Source: Pew Internet surveys, 2006-2012
  • 11. Gadget ownership snapshot for adults age 18+ % of American adults age 18+ who own each device Source: The Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project surveys.
  • 12. Mobile is the Needle: 88% of US Adults Have a Cell Phone % in each age group who have a cell phone 46% of US adults now own SMARTPHONES, up from 35% in Spring 2011 Highest rates among: 18-24 year-olds (67%) 25-34 year-olds (71%) 23% of all teens age 12- 17 have a smartphone 31% of 14-17 year-olds have a smartphone, compared with just 8% of Teen data July 2011 Adult data Feb 2012 12-13 year-olds
  • 13. Overall, if you had to use one single word to describe how you feel about your cell phone, what would that one word be?
  • 14. Smartphone ownership by age & income/education % of adults within each group who own a smartphone (for example, 58% of 18-29 year olds with a household income of less than $30,000 per year are smartphone owners) 18-29 30-49 50-64 65+ (n=336) (n=601) (n=639) (n=626) All adults 66% 59% 34% 13% Annual Household Income Less than $30,000 58 42 16 5 $30,000 or more 72 69 44 27 Educational Attainment High school grad or less 63 43 22 8 Some college or college graduate 70 71 44 20 Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project January 20-February 19, 2012 tracking survey. N=2,253 adults age 18 and older, including 901 interviews conducted on respondent’s cell phone. Interviews conducted in both English and Spanish.
  • 15. Gadgets Teens Use to Access the Internet In the last 30 days, have you used the internet on ____? % of all teens age 12-17 who used this gadget in past 30 days to access the internet Desktop or laptop 88% computer Cell phone 49 Mp3 player or iPod 34 Game console 30 Tablet computer or iPad 16 0 20 40 60 80 100 Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, April 19 – July 14, 2011 Teen Survey. n=799 teens 12-17 and a parent or guardian. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish, by landline and cell phone, and included an oversample of minority families.
  • 16. Tablet and E-reader Use is on the Rise • 29% of US adults own a specialized device for e-reading (either a tablet or an e- reader) – 19% of adults own an e-book reader – 19% of adults own a tablet computer • E-book reader and tablet ownership are strongly correlated with income and education, and these devices are most popular with adults under age 50 • Women are more likely than men to own e- readers, and parents are more likely than non-parents to own tablets
  • 17. What Kind of e-Reader Do You Own? Percent of e-reader owners age 18+ who own each type of e-book reader
  • 18. What is the main reason you do not currently have an e-reader? Just don't need one/don’t want one 24% % of Americans Cost/can’t afford it 19 age 16+ Prefer books/print 16 who do not own Don’t read/no time to read 10 an e-book Don’t know what an e-reader is 5 reader who cite Don’t want to learn tech/don’t know how to use it 4 Have enough other devices/use other devices 3 each reason Plan to get one/waiting for better features 3 Have iPad/tablet 3 Lack of time in general 2 85% of those I’m too old 2 who do not own Vision/health problems <1 an e-book Other 3 Don’t know/refused 5 reader have no plans to Dec. 2011 results are from a survey of 2,986 people age 16 and older conducted November 16- purchase one December 21, 2011 conducted in English and Spanish on landline and cell phones. The margin of error is +/- 2 percentage points. N for non-owners of e-reading devices=2,290.
  • 19. What Kind of Tablet Computer Do You Own? Percent of tablet owners age 18+ who own each type of tablet computer
  • 20. What is the main reason you do not currently have a tablet computer? Just don't need one/don’t want one 35% % of Americans Cost/can’t afford it 25 Have enough devices/happy with current devices 20 age 16+ Don’t want to learn tech/don’t know how to use it 7 who do not own Don’t know what a tablet computer is 2 a tablet Plan to get one/waiting for better features 2 computer who I’m too old 2 cite each reason Lack of time in general 1 Don’t read/no time to read <1 Vision/health problems <1 81% of those Prefer books/print <1 who do not own Prefer to use library <1 a tablet Other 2 Don’t know/refused 3 computer have no plans to Dec. 2011 results are from a survey of 2,986 people age 16 and older conducted November 16- December 21, 2011 conducted in English and Spanish on landline and cell phones. The margin of purchase one error is +/- 2 percentage points. N for non-owners of tablet computers=2,290.
  • 21. WHAT WE DO WITH OUR GADGETS
  • 22. Mobile is the Needle That Weaves Information Throughout Our World % of US adult cell owners who use their phones to…
  • 23. Cell Phone Activities by Race/Ethnicity % of adult cell phone owners age 18+ within each group who do the following activities with their cell phone Black, non- White, non-Hispanic Hispanic Hispanic (n=1343) (n=232) (n=196) Send or receive text messages 70 76 83* Take a picture 71 70 79* Access the internet 39 56* 51* Send a photo or video to someone 52 58 61* Send or receive email 34 46* 43* Download an app 28 36* 36* Play a game 31 43* 40* Play music 27 45* 47* Record a video 30 41* 42* Access a social networking site 25 39* 35* Watch a video 21 33* 39* Post a photo or video online 18 30* 28* Check bank balance or do online banking 15 27* 25* *indicates statistically significant differences compared with whites. Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, April 26 – May 22, 2011 Spring Tracking Survey. n=2,277 adults ages 18 and older, including 755 cell phone interviews. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish.
  • 24. How Phones Function In Our Lives % of US adult cell owners who had done each of the following in the past 30 days…
  • 25. Using Phones for Real-Time Information % of cell owners in each age group who have performed these real-time activities in the previous 30 days 60% 45 Coordinate a gathering 27 23 49% 39 Solve an unexpected problem 26 15 Decide whether or not to visit a 43% 37 18 business, such as restaurant 12 Look up something to settle an 45% 31 argument 15 18-29 30-49 4 33% Look up sports score 14 29 50-64 65+ 5 Get up-to-the minute traffic or public 31% 23 11 transit info 4 21% 21 Get help in an emergency situation 18 16 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Mobile Survey, March 15-April 3, 2012.
  • 26. Apps: From Superhighway to Bypass One in three US adults download apps to a cell phone or tablet computer Apps provide direct connections to information % of app downloaders who have downloaded each type of app… App downloading is highest among young adults age 18-29 Based on August 2011 Pew Internet Tracking Survey
  • 27. Apps, Geolocation and Augmented Reality
  • 28. Social Networks are the Threads That Connect Us 65% of US adults use social networking sites Consistent rates across gender, race/ethnicity, and income groups
  • 29. Why We Use Social Networks
  • 30. Social Networks and Social Cohesion For networked individuals, information is embedded A Pew study finds that contrary to fears the and ambient internet isolates people... • Facebook users are more trusting than other adults • Facebook users have more close relationships • Facebook users get more social support than other adults
  • 31. Given So Many Choices, How do Teens Communicate? The volume of teen texting has risen from 50 texts a day in 2009 to 60 texts a day in 2012 for the median teen texter Just 6% of teens use email daily, while 39% say they never use email
  • 32. Search and Information Gathering Over time, search has remained one of the most popular internet activities % of adult internet users who engage in each activity online Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project tracking surveys, 2002-2012. Social network site use not tracked prior to February, 2005. “Get news online” and “buy a product online” have not yet been asked in 2012.
  • 33. Who Uses Search? All online adults 91% % of online adults in each group Race/Ethnicity who use search engines White 93* African American 89* Hispanic 79 While the vast majority Age 18-29 96* of internet users use 30-49 91 search engines, 50-64 92 some demographic 65+ 80 groups are less likely Education Some high school 78 than others to High school 88* use search…. Some college 94* College graduate 95* This includes online Household income < $30,000 84 adults age 65+ and $30,000 - $49,999 93* those in the lowest $50,000 - $74,999 97* education and income $75,000+ 95* categories. *Denotes statistically significant difference with other rows in that category Source: Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Tracking Survey, Jan 20-Feb 19, 2012. N=2,253 adults age 18 and older. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
  • 34. Internet users are turning to search engines more frequently % of adult search users who use a search engine…. Daily use of search engines is most common among younger, more educated and more affluent internet users. 60% of internet users age 18-49 are daily search users v. 40% of those 50+ 70% of internet users who have graduated from college are daily search users v. 36% of those who have never been Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Tracking Survey, Jan 20-Feb 19, 2012. to college N=2,253 adults, age 18 and older. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish. An asterisk (*) indicates a significant difference across years at the .95 confidence level.
  • 35. Most adult search users have faith in the fairness and accuracy of results In general, do you think Internet search engines are a fair and unbiased source of information, or do you think search engines are NOT a fair and unbiased source? In general, how much of the information you find using search engines do you think is accurate or trustworthy? Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Winter 2012 Tracking Survey, January 20-February 19, 2012. N=2,253 adults, age 18 and older, including 901 cell phone interviews. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
  • 36. Most adult search engine users say the relevance and quality of results are improving over time Overall, in your experience, are search engine results getting MORE relevant and useful over time, LESS relevant and useful, or have you not seen any real difference over time? Overall, in your experience, is the QUALITY of the information you get using search engines getting BETTER over time, WORSE over time, or have you not seen any real difference? Source: The Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project Winter 2012 Tracking Survey, January 20-February 19, 2012. N=2,253 adults, age 18 and older, including 901 cell phone interviews. Interviews conducted in English and Spanish.
  • 37. READING IN AMERICA Books or Nooks?
  • 38. Library Research Timeline…Stage I (August 2011-July 2012) • Focus on libraries and new technologies • The Rise of E-Reading - Published – Special focus on reading habits of e-reader and tablet owners • E-books and libraries - June 2012 – Stories/quotes from library staff and patrons • Library use in different community types (forthcoming) • The habits of younger library users (forthcoming)
  • 39. First report: The rise of e-reading 21% of American adults read an e-book in the last year 68% read a print book 11% listened to an audiobook Overall, just 19% of adults say they read NO books in the past year, in any format
  • 40. Book reading by age % of each age group who have read a book in whole or in part in the past 12 months Source: Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Reading Habits Survey, November 16-December 21, 2011. N=2,986 respondents age 16 and older. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish and on landline and cells. The margin of error for the sample is +/- 2 percentage points.
  • 41. What do you like MOST about reading?
  • 42. % of adult book readers (age 18+) using this format on an average Theday, as offormat used by readers on any given day book June 2010 and December 2011 is shifting over time % of adult book readers (age 18+) who use each of these formats on an average day Source: Pew Research Center Surveys.
  • 43. Who are the readers behind the screens? Readers of e-books are more likely than other readers to be: • Under age 50 • College educated • Living in households earning $50K+ Other key characteristics: • They read more books, more often, and for a wider range of reasons • More likely to buy than borrow
  • 44. On what gadgets do e-readers read their books? % of e-book readers age 16 and older who read e-books on each type of device
  • 45. Which is better – print or e-book? Asked of those16+ who have read both e-books and print books in last 12 months
  • 46. When you want to read a particular e-book, where do you look first? % of e-book readers age 16+ who look first to each source
  • 47. Some Takeaways for Libraries Additional takeaways for librarians • The gadget doesn’t make the reader, but it may change the reader • 41% of tablet owners and 35% of e- reader owners said they are reading more since the advent of e-content • A majority of print readers (54%) and e-book readers (61%) prefer to purchase their own copies of books • Most audiobook listeners (61%) prefer to borrow their audiobooks
  • 48. Library Research Timeline…Stage II (May-November 2012) • Focus on the changing world of library services • The evolving role of libraries in communities – New library services – People’s expectations of libraries – “The library of the future” • The role of libraries in the lives of special populations – Lower-income users, minorities, rural residents, seniors
  • 49. Library Research Timeline…Stage III (Sept 2012–April 2013) • Library User Typology – Different user “types” based on: • Characteristics of respondent’s local library • How respondent uses the library • Respondent’s attitudes about libraries in general • An updated, in-depth portrait of young library users
  • 50. All data available at: pewinternet.org libraries.pewinternet.org Kristen Purcell, Ph.D. Associate Director, Research Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project kpurcell@pewinternet.org Twitter: @pewinternet @kristenpurcell