In the print vs. digital battle teenagers deliver a surprise

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Teenagers grew up with computers and spend hours each week on electronic media. So, naturally, they prefer e-books to paper, right? Wrong, say researchers in multiple countries. Print is considerably more popular than e-books among readers 16-24 in Great Britain, according to a survey carried out last year for The Bookseller Children’s Conference.

Out of 1,000 respondents aged 16-24, 64 percent said they preferred print books, while only 16 percent said they preferred e-books. Twenty percent didn’t have a preference.

The findings are not unique to England, according to Naomi Baron, linguistics professor at American University, who surveyed more than 300 university students from Japan, Germany, Slovakia, and the U.S. She found that 92 percent preferred to do serious reading in paper books, rather than e-readers, computers, phones, or tablets.

Reading in print actually may be a better option for students, according to a Norwegian study reported in ScienceNordic.com. A study of 10th graders completed early this year showed that comprehension is better when reading texts in print versus on a computer screen.

Researchers theorize that the experience of relating to a book physically produces a mental map of the entire text, something readers don’t experience with an e-book where they can see only a page or two at a time.

Paper also seems to communicate more to the emotions than a screen does, according to tests conducted by researchers at the University of Alberta in Canada. Their test results seem to indicate a connection between sensory perception and involvement in the text.

The results may be different for magazines and newspapers, since the research targeted only book reading. However, the research results are dramatic enough to give even periodical publishers a reason to question the automatic conclusion that because they grew up in the digital age young people naturally prefer digital to print media. It’s something to think about.

Print vs. digital—religious publishers buck the trend

With digital publishing on the upswing, one would expect religious publishers to be seeing big increases in eBook sales, while print sales decrease. In fact, when it comes to paperback books the opposite is the case in America, according to a report from the Association of American Publishers (AAP).

In the first quarter of 2013, eBook sales were down 0.6 percent compared to the same period last year, AAP reported. Hardcover books were down even more, declining 7 percent. On the other hand, paperback sales rose nearly 4 percent. Despite this, overall religious book sales were down 2 percent compared to the first quarter of 2012.

What does this mean? Possibly that religious readers still prefer to hold the book in their hand, but given the state of the economy are not willing to shell out for the hard cover version.