Using a sample of 3,559 households, the study examined the radio and
television viewing habits of both secular and religious programs by residents of the community of New Haven, Connecticut.
A few years ago, researchers from Indiana University studied
the television viewing habits of nearly 400 preteens for a year.
Not exact matches
Twenty - nine percent of children 2 to 3 years of age have a
television in their bedroom, and 30 % of parents have reported that watching a
television program enabled their children to fall asleep.3 Although parents perceive a televised program to be a calming sleep aid, some programs actually increase bedtime resistance, delay the onset of sleep, cause anxiety about falling asleep, and shorten sleep duration.41 Specifically, in children younger than 3 years,
television viewing is associated with irregular sleep schedules.42 Poor sleep
habits have adverse effects on mood, behavior, and learning.
A contract signed by parent, student, and teacher establishes a parental commitment to talk about school daily, attend conferences, limit
television viewing, and encourage food study
habits.
The questions are about
television, TV and
viewing habits.
The Survey is intended to develop a consumer profile including behavioral information and lifestyle and media
habits such as internet usage, time spent listening to the radio, travel, work,
television viewing, leisure activities, pet ownership and online shopping for pet products.
So a new report by Nielsen - the authority on US
television ratings - on the
viewing habits of esports fans almost feels a little late.
For example, some programs contain examples of people behaving disrespectfully toward one another, which could serve as a model for children to engage in the kind of verbal abuse that qualifies as bullying in most definitions.1, 32 Because watching
television can be
habit - forming, parents should be encouraged to limit the
television viewing of their young children in accord with American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, 38 which recommend no
television for children younger than 2 years old and limited
television thereafter.
Television -
viewing habits and sleep disturbance in school children.
The analyses also included age, race / ethnicity (three binary variables for Black, Hispanic and other ethnicity, coded with Whites as the reference group), gender, household income and parental education, media -
viewing habits — hours watching
television on a school day and how often the participant
viewed movies together with his / her parents — and receptivity to alcohol marketing (based on whether or not the adolescent owned alcohol - branded merchandise at waves 2 — 4).31 Family predictors included perceived inhome availability of alcohol, subject - reported parental alcohol use (assessed at the 16 M survey and assumed to be invariant) and perceptions of authoritative parenting (α = 0.80).32 Other covariates included school performance, extracurricular participation, number of friends who used alcohol, weekly spending money, sensation seeking (4 - wave Cronbach's α range = 0.57 — 0.62) 33 and rebelliousness (0.71 — 0.76).34 All survey items are listed in table S1.
Hierarchical multiple regression analysis of the total sample revealed that the combination of demographic variables, parental monitoring,
television -
viewing habits, and exposure to violence explained 45 % of students» self - reported violent behaviors.