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The image displays a line graph depicting children's television viewing hours per day from 1950 to 2010; in 1950, it starts at approximately 0.25 hours per day, increasing gradually to about 1 hour by 1960, then sharply rising to roughly 3.8 hours by 1970, peaking at 4 hours around 1980, dropping slightly to approximately 3.5 hours by 1990, increasing again to near 4.1 hours by 2000, and finally declining slightly to about 3.8 hours in 2010.
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The line graph illustrates the average amount of hours per day that children spent watching television from 1950 to 2010.
Overall, the most noticeable thing is that children’s television viewing sharply increased over the period.
In 1950, children spent approximately 10–20 minutes watching television, while in 1960 the figure reached almost 50 minutes per day. Starting from 1960, children’s interest in television dramatically jumped to 4 hours per day by 1975.
From 1975, the figures slightly fluctuated before 1990. From 1990, television viewing moderately declined to roughly 3.5 hours per day.
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