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Recalling sexual behavior: a methodological analysis of memory recall bias via interview using the diary as the gold standard

Recalling sexual behavior: a methodological analysis of memory recall bias via interview using the diary as the gold standard
Recalling sexual behavior: a methodological analysis of memory recall bias via interview using the diary as the gold standard
This study examined the effect of time lag on the validity of retrospective self-reports of sexual behavior. Seventy five heterosexual students (44 women, 31 men) made daily recordings of sexual behavior, condom use, and alcohol or substance use for 1 month. Ability of respondents to recall sexual behavior recorded during this period was assessed at 1, 2, and 3 months after diary completion using recall interviews (25 interviewed at each interval). For vaginal intercourse, total recall error was significantly greater at 3 months than at 1 month post-diary. For all other variables assessed, the 2- and 3-month time intervals did not produce significant increases in total recall error. Higher frequency of vaginal intercourse, orgasm, and alcohol use prior to sexual activity were associated with total recall error for some but not all behaviors and outcomes. The results provide a partial validation of the diary-interview recall model as a method for studying recall error.
0022-4499
325-332
Graham, Cynthia A.
ac400331-f231-4449-a69b-ec9a477224c8
Catania, Joseph A.
48b92aac-2bee-4564-926e-74c769d5605d
Brand, Richard
d034f497-480d-4b79-ac28-fd257ea59cfa
Duong, Tu
8a6d16d7-b0ac-4bd2-92b0-bfa07f8ef1b4
Canchola, Jesse A.
122f76f9-8e12-4408-a4c1-6bea1a68ed61
Graham, Cynthia A.
ac400331-f231-4449-a69b-ec9a477224c8
Catania, Joseph A.
48b92aac-2bee-4564-926e-74c769d5605d
Brand, Richard
d034f497-480d-4b79-ac28-fd257ea59cfa
Duong, Tu
8a6d16d7-b0ac-4bd2-92b0-bfa07f8ef1b4
Canchola, Jesse A.
122f76f9-8e12-4408-a4c1-6bea1a68ed61

Graham, Cynthia A., Catania, Joseph A., Brand, Richard, Duong, Tu and Canchola, Jesse A. (2003) Recalling sexual behavior: a methodological analysis of memory recall bias via interview using the diary as the gold standard. The Journal of Sex Research, 40 (4), 325-332. (doi:10.1080/00224490209552198).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study examined the effect of time lag on the validity of retrospective self-reports of sexual behavior. Seventy five heterosexual students (44 women, 31 men) made daily recordings of sexual behavior, condom use, and alcohol or substance use for 1 month. Ability of respondents to recall sexual behavior recorded during this period was assessed at 1, 2, and 3 months after diary completion using recall interviews (25 interviewed at each interval). For vaginal intercourse, total recall error was significantly greater at 3 months than at 1 month post-diary. For all other variables assessed, the 2- and 3-month time intervals did not produce significant increases in total recall error. Higher frequency of vaginal intercourse, orgasm, and alcohol use prior to sexual activity were associated with total recall error for some but not all behaviors and outcomes. The results provide a partial validation of the diary-interview recall model as a method for studying recall error.

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Published date: 2003
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 206949
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/206949
ISSN: 0022-4499
PURE UUID: 7f9ac345-fee2-4cab-a2ab-c019f7b1b382
ORCID for Cynthia A. Graham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7884-599X

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Date deposited: 24 Jan 2012 14:10
Last modified: 21 Mar 2024 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Joseph A. Catania
Author: Richard Brand
Author: Tu Duong
Author: Jesse A. Canchola

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