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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 shows teenagers’ preferred communication methods (ages 12-19) in a U.S. state from November 2006 to September 2009.
Overall, the use of text messaging increased sharply and became the most popular method by the end of the period. In contrast, traditional communication methods such as phone calls, face-to-face interaction, and email gradually declined, with email showing the biggest decrease.
In November 2006, phone calls were the most commonly used method at about 50%, followed by face-to-face communication (45%) and email (35%). Text messaging was the least popular at around 18%. However, text messaging rose steadily over time, reaching about 36% in early 2008, while phone calls and face-to-face communication continued to fall.
By September 2009, text messaging had become the dominant method at approximately 55%. Meanwhile, phone calls dropped to around 35%, face-to-face communication to 30%, and email declined further to only 10%. This shows a clear shift in teenagers’ communication preferences toward text messaging.
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