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The image is a line graph titled "Average Number of Hours Spent on Various Types of Media per Person per Week" showing four media types - Television, Internet, Radio, Printed Material - from 1990 to 2005; Television starts at roughly 29 hours in 1990, gradually decreases to 24 hours in 2005; Internet starts at 0 hours in 1990, sharply increases to 5 hours in 2005; Radio starts at approximately 6 hours in 1990, experiences slight fluctuations, ending at 5 hours in 2005; Printed Material starts at 5 hours in 1990, slightly decreases to roughly 3 hours in 2005; X-axis labeled "Year" from 1990 to 2005 in increments of 5 years, Y-axis labeled in increments of 5 hours from 0 to 30 hours; no numerical data points labeled on the lines.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The chart depicts the mean of hours spent by individuals on several platforms of media per week in the span of 1990 to 2005.
Overall, television was the most used media in the first decade exceeding the internet, radio, and printed material. After several years the trend of conventional media declined and the use of the Internet increased significantly.
Initially, people spent 25 hours in 7 days watching television, while they only read printed material for 6 hours and listened to the radio for approximately 4 hours. In contrast, people have not used the internet.
However, between 1995 and 200 the rate of hours people spent watching TV dropped consistently, which ultimately was only 18 hours in 2005. This decline also occurs in printed media left 3 hours a week at the end of the period. Conversely, the number of times people use on radio rises, even though only an hour. Additionally, the internet had the biggest growth from 2000 until 2005, with a peak of around 14 hours per week in 2005.
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