Two different interview techniques, used to obtain retrospective reports of daily drinking behavior from alcohol abusers, were empirically evaluated for degree of consistency. Fifteen male alcohol abusers receiving outpatient treatment for alcohol problems participated in two different studies: an alcohol treatment outcome study conducted by the Rand Corporation, and an evaluation of the reliability and validity of a time-line follow-back interview technique. The degree of consistency of self-reports of certain demographic information as well as drinking and related behaviors occurring 30 days pretreatment was evaluated Correlational and scatterplot analyses showed a moderate to high degree of agreement between the two data sources, leading...
Objective: The current study compares retrospective self-reports of quantity and frequency of drinki...
Objective The current study uses a within-subjects randomized design with the Timeline Followback (T...
Notes that alcohol abusers\u27 verbal self-reports are likely to be an accurate reflection of drinki...
Two different interview techniques, used to obtain retrospective reports of daily drinking behavior ...
The reliability of alcohol abusers\u27 retrospective self-reports was evaluated using a time-line fo...
Forty-eight male problem drinkers participating in an 18-month prospective evaluation of an outpatie...
Several major literature reviews have concluded that alcohol abusers generally give valid self-repor...
Thirty-nine male alcoholics in a voluntary outpatient treatment program were interviewed individuall...
Since alcohol research involves both clinical and non-clinical populations, it is important to evalu...
The test-retest reliability of alcohol abusers\u27 self-reports of their daily drinking and daily dr...
Using 54 outpatient male court-referred alcohol abusers as subjects, this study investigated the eff...
This study was designed to investigate the effects of treatment length restriction and follow-up int...
Although considerable research supports the veridicality of alcohol abusers\u27 self-reports, all st...
Objective: A recent study comparing the Quick Drinking Screen (QDS) with the Timeline Followback (TL...
Six-month posthospitalization follow-up data were collected from 52 alcoholic subjects and their col...
Objective: The current study compares retrospective self-reports of quantity and frequency of drinki...
Objective The current study uses a within-subjects randomized design with the Timeline Followback (T...
Notes that alcohol abusers\u27 verbal self-reports are likely to be an accurate reflection of drinki...
Two different interview techniques, used to obtain retrospective reports of daily drinking behavior ...
The reliability of alcohol abusers\u27 retrospective self-reports was evaluated using a time-line fo...
Forty-eight male problem drinkers participating in an 18-month prospective evaluation of an outpatie...
Several major literature reviews have concluded that alcohol abusers generally give valid self-repor...
Thirty-nine male alcoholics in a voluntary outpatient treatment program were interviewed individuall...
Since alcohol research involves both clinical and non-clinical populations, it is important to evalu...
The test-retest reliability of alcohol abusers\u27 self-reports of their daily drinking and daily dr...
Using 54 outpatient male court-referred alcohol abusers as subjects, this study investigated the eff...
This study was designed to investigate the effects of treatment length restriction and follow-up int...
Although considerable research supports the veridicality of alcohol abusers\u27 self-reports, all st...
Objective: A recent study comparing the Quick Drinking Screen (QDS) with the Timeline Followback (TL...
Six-month posthospitalization follow-up data were collected from 52 alcoholic subjects and their col...
Objective: The current study compares retrospective self-reports of quantity and frequency of drinki...
Objective The current study uses a within-subjects randomized design with the Timeline Followback (T...
Notes that alcohol abusers\u27 verbal self-reports are likely to be an accurate reflection of drinki...