Study: Blacks and women talk and text more

Aug 24, 2010 By PETER SVENSSON , AP Technology Writer

(AP) -- Blacks talk twice as much as whites on their cell phones, and women talk and text more than men, according to an analysis of wireless bills by the Nielsen Co.

The media-tracking firm went through the phone bills of 60,000 people for one year to figure out that blacks talk an average of 1,331 minutes per month, compared with 647 minutes per month for whites.

Whites were the least talkative people in the study, which ended in May. talked 826 minutes per month, and Asians and Pacific Islanders 692 minutes per month.

This isn't because blacks talk and whites text. Blacks text more too: 780 messages per month, compared with 566 for whites. Hispanics text almost as much as blacks, at 767 messages per month. and Pacific Islanders text the least, at 384 per month.

One reason blacks talk more on cell phones may be that fewer of them have home phones, but this hardly explains the whole difference. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, 25 percent of black adults had only service last year, compared with 21 percent for white adults.

Blacks make more use of other phone features, too. A study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project last year found that blacks were a lot more likely to use the Internet from their phones. That finding might be party explained by their lagging adoption of home broadband.

Women talk 22 percent more than men: 856 minutes per month compared with 667. They also text 34 percent more.

The greater number of black and Hispanics in the South means that it's the most talkative area of the country. The area of heavy texting is less well defined, but it's generally more popular in the South and in the interior of the country.

Mississippi is unusual in that inhabitants are big on both texting and talking, something Nielsen believes may be due to its population being relatively large and young - teenagers text a lot more than adults, of course.

The Nielsen panel of 60,000 households was weighted to match the Census. However, it looked only at households that got phone bills. People who have prepaid service generally don't get bills and make up about 20 percent of wireless subscribers.

Explore further: Text in on smarter phones

5 /5 (1 vote)
add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Tracfone tests cheap unlimited plan on Verizon

Jul 15, 2009

(AP) -- Tracfone Wireless, the country's largest provider of "prepaid" cell phones, is quietly testing a new service that appears to be a response to the fierce price competition in the prepaid market.

Recommended for you

Text in on smarter phones

13 hours ago

Alternative input methods for smart phones, such as Swype and SwiftKey, offer substantial benefits to users and are comparable with common typing speeds found on computer keyboards, according to a report published by researchers ...

AP probe further strains Obama, press rapport

May 20, 2013

Reports emerged last week that the Department of Justice had secretly obtained two months' worth of phone records of journalists at The Associated Press as part of a larger investigation into a failed al-Qaida ...

Pakistan adopts Chinese rival GPS satellite system

May 18, 2013

Pakistan is set to become the fifth Asian country to use China's domestic satellite navigation system which was launched as a rival to the US global positioning system, a report said Saturday.

User comments : 0

More news stories

NASA: Austin, calling Austin. 3-D pizzas to go

(Phys.org) —The idea of living with 3-D printed food is neither unthinkable nor new; designers and futurists have been looking to 3-D printing as food's next frontier. In 2012, there was news that the Thiel ...

Forecast for Titan: Wild weather could be ahead

(Phys.org) —Saturn's moon Titan might be in for some wild weather as it heads into its spring and summer, if two new models are correct. Scientists think that as the seasons change in Titan's northern hemisphere, ...