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Am J Ind Med. 2010 Nov;53(11):1142-9. doi: 10.1002/ajim.20878.

Daily self-reports resulted in information bias when assessing exposure duration to computer use.

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1
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Self-reported exposure duration to computer use is widely used in exposure assessment, and this study examined the associated information bias in a repeated measures setting.

METHODS:

For 3 weeks, 30 undergraduate students reported daily cumulative computer-use duration and musculoskeletal symptoms at four random times per day. Usage-monitor software installed onto participant's personal computers provided the reference measure. We compared daily self-reported and software-recorded duration, and modeled the effect of musculoskeletal symptoms on observed differences.

RESULTS:

The relationships between daily self-reported and software-recorded computer-use duration varied greatly across subject with Spearman's correlations ranging from -0.22 to 0.8. Self-reports generally overestimated computer use when software-recorded durations were less than 3.6 hr, and underestimated when above 3.6 hr. Experiencing symptoms was related to a 0.15-hr increase in self-reported duration after controlling for software-recorded duration.

CONCLUSIONS:

Daily self-reported computer-use duration had a weak-to-moderate correlation with software-recorded duration, and their relationship changed slightly with musculoskeletal symptoms. Self-reports resulted in both non-differential and differential information bias.

PMID:
20632313
DOI:
10.1002/ajim.20878
[Indexed for MEDLINE]
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