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Claim Text
For example, in 2023, the most highly educated people were more than twice as likely to read as the least educated, and high-income people were about 1.5 times as likely to read as low-income people.
Simplified Text
In 2023 highly educated people were twice as likely to read as least educated people
Confidence Score
0.900
Claim Maker
The author
Context Type
News Article
Context Details
{
    "year": 2023,
    "income_disparity": "high-income 1.5 times as likely to read as low-income",
    "education_disparity": "highly educated twice as likely to read as least educated"
}
UUID
9fc8a33f-87ca-45ed-8124-e6d585c4d945
Vector Index
✗ No vector
Created
September 2, 2025 at 7:20 PM (6 days ago)
Last Updated
September 2, 2025 at 7:20 PM (6 days ago)

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Screenshot of https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/20/well/reading-pleasure-decline-study.html?campaign_id=18&emc=edit_hh_20250829&instance_id=161530&nl=well&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=204892&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337
14 claims 🔥
6 days ago
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/20/well/reading-pleasure-decline-study.html?campaign_id=18&emc=edit_hh_20250829&instance_id=161530&nl=well&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=204892&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337

A new study reveals a significant drop in recreational reading among Americans over two decades. Researchers cite potential factors like increased technology use and economic pressures. Demographic disparities in reading habits also widened.

Reading
Leisure
Technology
Social Trends
Education
Public Health

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