For the first time, more tablet computers are owned by women in Britain than by men, a new study has found.
The majority of tablet owners in the UK are women, with the share of female owners increasing by 9 percentage points in the past year, researchers said.
The figures for the 2013 survey show that females own 52 per cent of the tablets in the UK, up from 43 per cent in 2012. In the same period the share of tablets owned by men has fallen from 57 to 48 per cent.
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The only age group that has seen a decline in share over the past year is the over-55s, whose proportion of ownership has fallen from 42 to 31 per cent, researchers said.
The more even distribution of ownership across age groups indicates that the UK tablet market is becoming more mainstream, they said.
The study found that 22 per cent of the adult population now own a tablet, up from 18 per cent last quarter. Furthermore, 26 per cent of the UK households own a tablet.
Researchers said the growth in ownership looks set to continue with close to a fifth (19 per cent) of non-tablet owners identified as "hot prospects" to obtain one of the devices in the future.
The report found that over a quarter (27 per cent) of these prospects are aged 18-44 and more than a third (34 per cent) are female.
"The early adopters of tablets have typically been affluent males. As they buy the latest models, they have placed their old devices on to the secondary market or give them to other members of their household," John Gilbert, Lead Director at YouGov Technology & Telecoms, said.