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Community Participation by U.S. Adults

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Community_participationThe Pew Internet & American Life Project has conducted regular, extensive surveys on a wide variety of online behaviors of U.S. adults, including participation in online communities.  I did a statistical "mashup" of Pew/Internet data with U.S. census data to come up with the following table, illustrating growth in community participation.  In the first quarter of 2000, 80.1 million U.S. adults participated in online communities; by the end of 2007, this had increased to 146.6 million adults.

Quarter Community Participants
2000 Q1 80.1 million
2000 Q2 82.1 million
2000 Q3 84.3 million
2000 Q4 90.0 million
2001 Q1 92.1 million
2001 Q2 94.3 million
2001 Q3 96.6 million
2001 Q4 102.4 million
2002 Q1 108.2 million
2002 Q2 103.3 million
2002 Q3 109.3 million
2002 Q4 102.6 million
2003 Q1 112.0 million
2003 Q2 112.5 million
2003 Q3 115.0 million
2003 Q4 117.4 million
2004 Q1 116.1 million
2004 Q2 116.6 million
2004 Q3 115.4 million
2004 Q4 114.1 million
2005 Q1 125.8 million
2005 Q2 128.3 million
2005 Q3 136.5 million
2005 Q4 125.8 million
2006 Q1 139.7 million
2006 Q2 137.5 million
2006 Q3 135.3 million
2006 Q4 136.0 million
2007 Q1 138.6 million
2007 Q2 141.2 million
2007 Q3 143.9 million
2007 Q4 146.6 million

This a mashup, in the sense that neither the U.S. Census nor Pew would recognize the final output.  I took the U.S. adult population (according to the Census), multiplied it by the percent of adults who use the Internet (according to Pew), then multiplied it by the percent who participate in online communities (again, according to Pew).  For some quarters, where Pew did not field surveys with those particular questions, I interpolated estimates.

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