{"id": 1015567, "name": "Time spent with other people throughout life - Co-worker", "unit": "Hours", "createdAt": "2025-03-17T12:16:31.000Z", "updatedAt": "2025-03-17T12:16:31.000Z", "coverage": "", "timespan": "15-85", "datasetId": 7007, "shortUnit": "h", "columnOrder": 0, "shortName": "t__who_category_co_worker", "catalogPath": "grapher/atus/2025-01-06/atus_who/atus_who#t__who_category_co_worker", "dimensions": {"years": {"values": [{"id": 15}, {"id": 16}, {"id": 17}, {"id": 18}, {"id": 19}, {"id": 20}, {"id": 21}, {"id": 22}, {"id": 23}, {"id": 24}, {"id": 25}, {"id": 26}, {"id": 27}, {"id": 28}, {"id": 29}, {"id": 30}, {"id": 31}, {"id": 32}, {"id": 33}, {"id": 34}, {"id": 35}, {"id": 36}, {"id": 37}, {"id": 38}, {"id": 39}, {"id": 40}, {"id": 41}, {"id": 42}, {"id": 43}, {"id": 44}, {"id": 45}, {"id": 46}, {"id": 47}, {"id": 48}, {"id": 49}, {"id": 50}, {"id": 51}, {"id": 52}, {"id": 53}, {"id": 54}, {"id": 55}, {"id": 56}, {"id": 57}, {"id": 58}, {"id": 59}, {"id": 60}, {"id": 61}, {"id": 62}, {"id": 63}, {"id": 64}, {"id": 65}, {"id": 66}, {"id": 67}, {"id": 68}, {"id": 69}, {"id": 70}, {"id": 71}, {"id": 72}, {"id": 73}, {"id": 74}, {"id": 75}, {"id": 76}, {"id": 77}, {"id": 78}, {"id": 79}, {"id": 80}, {"id": 85}]}, "entities": {"values": [{"id": 371419, "name": "All people", "code": null}, {"id": 246245, "name": "Men", "code": null}, {"id": 246246, "name": "Women", "code": null}]}}, "descriptionShort": "Time spent with co-workers, by gender and age. This data is measured in hours per day and based on averages from surveys in the United States between 2010 and 2023.", "descriptionProcessing": "- Data points have been weighted to make them more representative of the population with the survey weights provided by ATUS in the original data.\n- Data for 2020 is excluded, since the American Time Use Survey was not conducted during the period March 18, 2020 to May 9, 2020. Therefore data collected for 2020 is not representative of the entire year.\n- The visual presentation and data processing has been adapted from Lindberg (2017). You can find the original script here: https://gist.github.com/halhen/d969234077c9b70df4c4b8dd902bea38.", "type": "float", "grapherConfigIdETL": "0195a408-c028-729c-b28d-c80c7c8830b9", "datasetName": "American Time Use Survey", "updatePeriodDays": 365, "datasetVersion": "2025-01-06", "nonRedistributable": false, "display": {"name": "With Co-worker", "unit": "Hours", "shortUnit": "h"}, "schemaVersion": 2, "processingLevel": "major", "presentation": {"topicTagsLinks": ["Time Use"]}, "descriptionKey": ["This data is based on the American Time Use Survey (ATUS), which is conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. This is an annual, cross-sectional survey that measures how people spend their time and who they spend it with.", "The question is phrased as \"Who was with in the room with you?\" or \"Who accompanied you?\u201d. If people are on a phone or video call, they are not counted as being with someone, unless someone else is in the room with them.", "We pool the ATUS data from 2010 to 2023 and then calculate averages for each age group.", "We have combined some categories for presentation purposes: \"children\" include related and household children under 18, grandchildren and other related children under 18, \"friends\" include roommates or lodgers and \"partner\" includes spouses, boy-/girlfriends, and co-habiting partners.", "Time spent with multiple people can be counted more than once (e.g., attending a party with friends and partner counts toward both \"friends\" and \"partner\").", "The \"Other\" category includes all other relationships not covered by the other categories, such as neighbors, customers or non-related, non-household children.", "Since this is a cross-sectional survey, it queries a new sample from the U.S. population every year. This means that we are actually seeing the result of two underlying trends: the effect of aging on social connections, but also the effect of cohort trends. Different generations have different experiences, preferences and social norms, which are reflected in the data.", "All individuals aged 80-84 are included in the \"age 80\" category."], "origins": [{"id": 3146, "titleSnapshot": "American Time Use Survey - Summary File", "title": "American Time Use Survey", "descriptionSnapshot": "The Activity summary file contains information about the total time each ATUS respondent spent doing each activity on the diary day. Because Activity codes have changed somewhat between 2003 and the present, this file uses activity codes that appear in the 2003\u20132023 ATUS Coding Lexicon (PDF).", "description": "The American Time Use Survey (ATUS) measures the amount of time people spend doing various activities, such as paid work, childcare, volunteering, and socializing. It provides nationally representative estimates of how, where, and with whom Americans spend their time, and is the only federal survey providing data on the full range of nonmarket activities, from childcare to volunteering.", "producer": "U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics", "citationFull": "American Time Use Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, https://www.bls.gov/tus/, 2023", "attributionShort": "BLS", "versionProducer": "03-23", "urlMain": "https://www.bls.gov/tus/data/datafiles-0323.htm", "urlDownload": "https://www.bls.gov/tus/datafiles/atussum-0323.zip", "dateAccessed": "2024-12-20", "datePublished": "2023", "license": {"url": "https://www.bls.gov/opub/copyright-information.htm", "name": "Public Domain"}}]}