Authors
Marie-Louise Mares, Emory H Woodard IV
Publication date
2006/12/1
Journal
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media
Volume
50
Issue
4
Pages
595-614
Publisher
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Description
General Social Survey data were used to test the claims that (a) older adults watch more television than younger adults and (b) they do so because of poor health, retirement, and widowhood. Older adults did watch more television on average than other age groups. This effect was not explained by birth cohort or altered by time of measurement. However, the age effect was small (despite striking mean differences), because variability within the youngest and oldest groups was large. Overall, traditional explanations of older adults' viewing were largely unsupported. Demographic and social variables explained younger adults' viewing better than older adults'.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ML Mares, EH Woodard IV - Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 2006