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The image presents a table detailing average weekend time spent by Canadian teenagers aged 13-19 on various activities over two years, 1998 and 2013: Practicing sports occupies 1h15 in 1998 and increases to 1h34 in 2013; Hanging out with friends drops from 5h42 in 1998 to 2h27 in 2013; Watching movies/TV series rises from 1h2 in 1998 to 3h14 in 2013; Playing videogames goes from 36min in 1998 to 2h in 2013; Playing board games changes from 59min in 1998 to 15min in 2013; Chatting (phone or PC) increases from 38min in 1998 to 7h40 in 2013; Reading transitions from 1h in 1998 to 43min in 2013; Studying varies from 3h33 in 1998 to 4h24 in 2013.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The table compares the average weekend time spent by Canadian teenagers from 1998 to 2013
Overall, all the data shows the significant impact of new technological devices on this young generation aged 13 to 19.
Indeed, the table indicates that they spent less time hanging out with friends. For example, while in 1998 they had spent nearly 5h 40min with their friends, in 2013 they spent around 2h27min.
Moreover, the data demonstrates that teenagers in Canada began to use these new techonological devices also for communicate with others. For instance, the time that they spent using their smartphones and computers for chatting increased by around 7 hours between 1998 and 2013.
However, in the same period the table shows that there wasn’t a important impact on time that Canadian teens passed practising sports. In fact, that time remained stable during the period, it moved from 1h 15min in 1998 to 1h34 min in 2013.
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