Literature DB >> 25973649

Weekly Cycles in Daily Report Data: An Overlooked Issue.

Yu Liu1, Stephen G West1.   

Abstract

Daily diaries and other everyday experience methods are increasingly used to study relationships between two time-varying variables X and Y. Although daily data potentially often have weekly cyclical patterns (e.g., stress may be higher on weekdays and lower on weekends), the majority of daily diary studies have ignored this possibility. In this study, we investigated the effect of ignoring existing weekly cycles. We reanalyzed an empirical dataset (stress and alcohol consumption) and performed Monte Carlo simulations to investigate the impact of omitting weekly cycles. In the empirical dataset, ignoring cycles led to the inference of a significant within-person X-Y relation whereas modeling cycles suggested that this relationship did not exist. Simulation results indicated that ignoring cycles that existed in both X and Y led to bias in the estimated within-person X-Y relationship. The amount and direction of bias depended on the magnitude of the cycles, magnitude of the true within-person X-Y relation, and synchronization of the cycles. We encourage researchers conducting daily diary studies to address potential weekly cycles in their data. We provide guidelines for detecting and modeling cycles to remove their influence and discuss challenges of causal inference in daily experience studies.
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25973649     DOI: 10.1111/jopy.12182

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers        ISSN: 0022-3506


  7 in total

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5.  Dynamics of sleep, sedentary behavior, and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity on school versus nonschool days.

Authors:  Bridget Armstrong; Michael W Beets; Angela Starrett; Keith Brazendale; Gabrielle Turner-McGrievy; Brian E Saelens; Russell R Pate; Shawn D Youngstedt; Alberto Maydeu-Olivares; R Glenn Weaver
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6.  On Standardizing Within-Person Effects: Potential Problems of Global Standardization.

Authors:  Lijuan Wang; Qian Zhang; Scott E Maxwell; C S Bergeman
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7.  Pooled Time Series Modeling Reveals Smoking Habit Memory Pattern.

Authors:  Jesús F Rosel; Marcel Elipe-Miravet; Eduardo Elósegui; Patricia Flor-Arasil; Francisco H Machancoses; Jacinto Pallarés; Sara Puchol; Juan J Canales
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  7 in total

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