This proposal was prepared in response to NIH Program Announcement (PA-98-031) entitled """"""""Methodology and measurement in the behavioral and social sciences."""""""" Research on autobiographical memory has shown that numerous cognitive processes have the potential to bias retrospective reports of personal experiences. Behavioral and medical scientists and practitioners rely heavily on recall procedures in their research endeavors and for treating patients. Measures of symptoms, pain, treatment efficacy, adherence, and traumatic experiences, for example, are typically based on retrospective data, sometimes for periods of several months or even years. The primary aims of this proposal involve comparing assessments of momentary experiences, based on a procedure we have called Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA), with those of recalled experiences in an effort to determine 1) the relationship between the two types of data and 2) the meaning and practical utility of each type of data.
The first aim seeks to understand how people summarize their experiences and create a recall. It will also explore situational influences and characteristics of the person that influence recall ratings.
The second aim i s grounded in the hypothesis that summaries of experiences based upon momentary ratings versus recall carry information that may be useful for different purposes, which could have important theoretical and practical consequences for scientists and practitioners. Secondary aims investigate several methodological issues pertain to the conduct of EMA studies including potential reactivity effects, participant burden, frequency of momentary sampling, optimal statistical methods for analyzing EMA data, and methods for improving recall of experiences. Outcome variables for testing these questions are mood and pain. Both are constructs with wide basic and applied utility in behavioral and medical domains. These measures will be intensively examined in patients with osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, some with recent diagnoses and others with chronic conditions in order to ensure variability in mood and pain over time. Results from these studies should have implications for understanding the meaning of recalled mood and pain measures, addressing the questions: how do people summarize their experiences and what factors influence those summaries? They will also increase knowledge about when momentary versus recalled summary measures should be used for addressing basic and applied questions. Finally, the study will provide practical information for researchers using momentary assessment methods.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA085819-04
Application #
6628461
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1-BRB-D (01))
Program Officer
Stefanek, Michael E
Project Start
2000-02-11
Project End
2005-01-31
Budget Start
2003-03-21
Budget End
2004-01-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$420,273
Indirect Cost
Name
State University New York Stony Brook
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
804878247
City
Stony Brook
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
11794
Schneider, Stefan; Junghaenel, Doerte U; Ono, Masakatsu et al. (2018) Temporal dynamics of pain: an application of regime-switching models to ecological momentary assessments in patients with rheumatic diseases. Pain 159:1346-1358
Stone, Arthur A; Broderick, Joan E; Kaell, Alan T (2010) Single momentary assessments are not reliable outcomes for clinical trials. Contemp Clin Trials 31:466-72
Raselli, Carla; Broderick, Joan E (2007) The association of depression and neuroticism with pain reports: a comparison of momentary and recalled pain assessment. J Psychosom Res 62:313-20
Broderick, Joan E; Stone, Arthur A; Calvanese, Pamela et al. (2006) Recalled pain ratings: a complex and poorly defined task. J Pain 7:142-9
Broderick, Joan E; Stone, Arthur A (2006) Paper and electronic diaries: Too early for conclusions on compliance rates and their effects--Comment on Green, Rafaeli, Bolger, Shrout, and Reis (2006). Psychol Methods 11:106-11; discussion 123-5
Stone, Arthur A; Schwartz, Joseph E; Broderick, Joan E et al. (2005) Variability of momentary pain predicts recall of weekly pain: a consequence of the peak (or salience) memory heuristic. Pers Soc Psychol Bull 31:1340-6
Litcher-Kelly, Leighann; Stone, Arthur A; Broderick, Joan E et al. (2004) Associations among pain intensity, sensory characteristics, affective qualities, and activity limitations in patients with chronic pain: a momentary, within-person perspective. J Pain 5:433-9
Stone, Arthur A; Shiffman, Saul; Schwartz, Joseph E et al. (2003) Patient compliance with paper and electronic diaries. Control Clin Trials 24:182-99
Stone, Arthur A; Broderick, Joan E; Schwartz, Joseph E et al. (2003) Intensive momentary reporting of pain with an electronic diary: reactivity, compliance, and patient satisfaction. Pain 104:343-51
Broderick, Joan E; Schwartz, Joseph E; Shiffman, Saul et al. (2003) Signaling does not adequately improve diary compliance. Ann Behav Med 26:139-48

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