4.6 Article

Validation of a Previous-Day Recall Measure of Active and Sedentary Behaviors

Journal

MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE
Volume 45, Issue 8, Pages 1629-1638

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3182897690

Keywords

EXPOSURE ASSESSMENT; MEASUREMENT ERROR; PHYSICAL ACTIVITY; BEHAVIORAL EPIDEMIOLOGY

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01NR011477]
  2. Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health

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Purpose: A previous-day recall (PDR) may be a less error-prone alternative to traditional questionnaire-based estimates of physical activity and sedentary behavior (e.g., past year), but the validity of the method is not established. We evaluated the validity of an interviewer administered PDR in adolescents (12-17 yr) and adults (18-71 yr). Methods: In a 7-d study, participants completed three PDR, wore two activity monitors, and completed measures of social desirability and body mass index. PDR measures of active and sedentary time was contrasted against an accelerometer (ActiGraph) by comparing both to a valid reference measure (activPAL) using measurement error modeling and traditional validation approaches. Results: Age- and sex-specific mixed models comparing PDR to activPAL indicated the following: 1) there was a strong linear relationship between measures for sedentary (regression slope, beta(1) = 0.80-1.13) and active time (beta(1) = 0.64-1.09), 2) person-specific bias was lower than random error, and 3) correlations were high (sedentary: r = 0.60-0.81; active: r = 0.52-0.80). Reporting errors were not associated with body mass index or social desirability. Models comparing ActiGraph to activPAL indicated the following: 1) there was a weaker linear relationship between measures for sedentary (beta(1) = 0.63-0.73) and active time (beta(1) = 0.61-0.72), (2) person-specific bias was slightly larger than random error, and (3) correlations were high (sedentary: r = 0.68-0.77; active: r = 0.57-0.79). Conclusions: Correlations between the PDR and the activPAL were high, systematic reporting errors were low, and the validity of the PDR was comparable with the ActiGraph. PDR may have value in studies of physical activity and health, particularly those interested in measuring the specific type, location, and purpose of activity-related behaviors.

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