Measurement of Cigarette Smoking: Comparisons of Global Self-Report, Returned Cigarette Filters, and Ecological Momentary Assessment

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Abstract

Prior work suggests that prospective measurement of cigarette use may be more reliable and valid than retrospective self-reports. Despite several studies comparing retrospective and prospective methods, there are a myriad of prospective methods that have not been directly compared, including spent cigarette filters that are returned to the laboratory by participants and diary logs of cigarette use on an electronic device via ecological momentary assessment. The current secondary data analysis compared the reliability of retrospective global self-report, returned cigarette filters, and electronic diary logs among a sample of cigarette smokers that also use smokeless tobacco (SLT; N = 51) over two consecutive weeks. CPD values also were compared to salivary cotinine levels to determine whether any method was associated more strongly with nicotine/tobacco exposure. Results indicated that CPD values via global self-report were significantly larger than returned filter and diary log daily averages across both weeks (t(50) = 8.28 to 9.35; p

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Ozga, J. E., Bays, C., Haliwa, I., Felicione, N. J., Ferguson, S. G., Dino, G., & Blank, M. D. (2021). Measurement of Cigarette Smoking: Comparisons of Global Self-Report, Returned Cigarette Filters, and Ecological Momentary Assessment. Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, 30(3), 365–370. https://doi.org/10.1037/pha0000449

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