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Abstract
Prospective diaries, seven-day recall interviews, and a self-assessed summary measure are compared as methods of measuring drinking frequency. The distribution of the number of drinking days in diaries is modelled by the beta-binomial model and applied to a Dutch 1985 general population one-week diary and to a 1983 two-week diary. The model-based comparisons show that the deviances between the methods are most pronounced in respondents with intermediate drinking rates. Memory effects are suggested as an interpretation of the deviances.
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