Just what do all those people do online? You know, this strange new human hybrid that looks into screen to learn something, rather than, say, a tablet? It's curious how we torture ourselves with the change from reading to newsprint or calendared magazines to pixels.
After all, it's largely the same stuff, absent 70 million or so (what do you say today, Technorati?) blogging blowhards.
So of course I enjoyed the new EyeTrack study out of Poynter, as reported by Reuters.
People who use the Internet to read the news have a greater attention span than print readers, according to a U.S. study that refutes the idea that Web surfers jump around and don't read much. The EyeTrack07 survey by the Poynter Institute, a Florida-based journalism school, found online readers read 77 percent of what they chose to read while broadsheet newspaper readers read an average of 62 percent, and tabloid readers about 57 percent.
Basically, online readers pay attention better and comprehend what they are reading better. All somewhat a counterpoint of course to the notion that online is quick, give-me-a-briefing medium, on which Yahoo, AOL, MSN, Google and Topix have built flegling online news aggregation businesses. The inside estimate has been that only 5% of readers click through from those aggregator news sites to the originating publisher.
So, as we say in the consulting biz: More research needed.
Love the result, though, as someone addicted to digital media. Love those EyeTrack glasses. But the whole thing reminds me of The Amazing Kreskin, a "mentalist" mainstay of the old Ed Sullivan-type variety shows of the '60s and '70s. Oh, Kreskin, what is our newsreader thinking now, about the latest outrage in Tikrit or about Anna Nicole Smith's baby's authentic father? I'm not sure EyeTrack does that, but maybe in the next rev.

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