15 pc of US teens engage in 'sexting': study
15 pc of US teens engage in 'sexting': study
Study shows teens carry nude or sexually suggestive snaps in mobiles.

Los Angeles: An estimated 15 per cent of American teenagers have received nude or sexually suggestive photographs on their cell phones, according to a study on Wednesday by the Pew internet and American life project.

The study about the tech-fueled trend called "sexting" said that boys are as likely as girls to send "sexts," while teens who pay for their own cell phone bills are more likely to text salacious shots.

The study of 800 teens found that just 4 per cent of 12-year-old to 17-year-old admitting to sexting photos or videos of themselves. About 8 per cent of 17-year-olds sent sexts and 30 per cent received them, the report found.

Teenage sexting usually is done as part of a relationship or would-be relationship between teens, the Pew focus groups found. However, those messages are often forwarded to people outside the relationship, especially after a breakup.

"It doesn't take that many people creating these images for a lot of people to see them," said a senior research specialist at the Pew project and author of the report Amanda Lenhart.

But researchers said the study still indicates sexting, which could lead to other problems such as cyber bullying, has become part of the fabric of modern teenage life. About 75 per cent of US teenagers have cell phones and 66 per cent of them send text messages, Pew said.

"Kids have experience with it," said Lenhart. "It's something they have to deal with and talk about in their lives."

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