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The image is a line graph titled "How teenagers in one US state communicated" showing percentages of teenagers using text messages, calls on cell phones, talk face-to-face, and email from Nov 2006 to Sep 2009. Nov 2006: text messages ~18%, calls on cell phones ~50%, talk face-to-face ~45%, email ~35%. Nov 2007: text messages ~30%, calls on cell phones ~45%, talk face-to-face ~40%, email ~20%. Feb 2008: text messages ~36%, calls on cell phones ~40%, talk face-to-face ~33%, email ~15%. Sep 2009: text messages ~55%, calls on cell phones ~35%, talk face-to-face ~30%, email ~10%. Text messages show a sharp upward trend, calls on cell phones and talk face-to-face show a downward trend, and email shows a gradual decline.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph provides information on the communication methods used by teenagers aged 12 to 19 in the US from November 2006 to September 2009. It illustrates four different methods of communication—text messaging, cell phone calls, face-to-face conversations, and email—over this three-year period.
Overall, it is evident that texting was the most popular method, peaking at around 65%. Face-to-face communication was the second most-used method, beginning at roughly 30%, rising to 40% in 2007, then dropping back to 30% in 2008 before increasing slightly to around 35% by 2009.
In contrast, email was the least used method, starting at over 14% in 2006 and declining to about 10% by 2009. Meanwhile, cell phone calls saw a steady, slight increase in popularity over the period.
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