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The image depicts a bar chart with the vertical axis labeled "Percentage of people" and the horizontal axis labeled "Age groups", divided into five categories: 10-17, 18-29, 30-49, 50-64, 65+. Three types of media consumption are represented with different patterns for each bar: solid for "social networks", horizontal stripes for "micro-blogging", and dots for "radio". The 10-17 age group shows approximately 63% social networks usage, 40% micro-blogging and 20% radio. The 18-29 age group has around 80% social networks, 52% micro-blogging and 30% radio. The 30-49 age group displays nearly 50% social networks, 38% micro-blogging, and 35% radio. The 50-64 age group indicates about 40% social networks, 28% micro-blogging and 55% radio. Lastly, the 65+ age group shows roughly 30% social networks, 25% micro-blogging and 65% radio.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart provides information about three types of media that five different age groups use for getting news from a certain country in 2011.
Overall, it can be seen that radio had the highest proportion of people who used it for social information, while microblogging had the least amount in each of the years.
On the one hand, according to the graph, the radio stood at 40% of the (10-17) age group. Then it experienced a rapid increase and remained unchanged in the following three age groups, with around 95% of people from 18-64. However, there was a slight decrease at the end of the period.
On the other hand, the remaining two types of technology, namely microblogging and social networks, had similar patterns. Finally, in the first two age groups, both remained consistently unchanged; then both showed a downward trend and stood at under 10% in the over-65 age group.
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