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Men Still Dominate Worldwide Internet Use

01/22/2002
The number of female at-home Internet users in the United States grew faster than the overall Internet population when it jumped 9 percent in December 2001, but outside the United States and Canada it remains a different story.
By CyberAtlas staff


American men still spend more time online than women, Nielsen//NetRatings found. In December 2001, men spent 24 percent more time online at home than women, averaging 11 hours (a 17 percent increase from a year ago). Females access the Internet, on average, 17 times in December 2001, a 13 percent increase from a year earlier. Men viewed 40 more pages on average than women, 801 pages versus 573 pages.

"Men spent more time online, logged on more often and accessed more content than women, despite being out-numbered by the female Internet population by more than 5.2 million surfers," said Dawn Brozek, senior Internet analyst at NetRatings. "Generally speaking, women shoulder a majority of the household responsibilities and therefore face a 'time poverty' at home, with less leisure time than men to spend on activities such as surfing the Internet."

When Nielsen//NetRatings examined the demographics of the top sites in its Global Index, visitors from outside the United States and Canada skewed the numbers to make them predominantly male.

"With the exception of the U.S. and Canada, the Internet population in every country Nielsen//NetRatings measures is predominantly male," said Richard Goosey, chief of measurement science and analytics at Nielsen//NetRatings. "The proportions of the audiences for these top properties are often heavily male, going well beyond the general male to female proportion of the overall population. However, the gender proportion for each property in the Americas region is more balances, reflecting the strong female audiences in the U.S. and Canada."

Source of Article: Cyberatlas

Date of Article: January 22, 2002