review article | Q7318358 |
scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1111/J.1746-1561.1991.TB06012.X |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 1943043 |
P50 | author | Tom Baranowski | Q37371402 |
P2093 | author name string | Simons-Morton BG | |
P433 | issue | 5 | |
P304 | page(s) | 204-207 | |
P577 | publication date | 1991-05-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Journal of School Health | Q15765695 |
P1476 | title | Observation in assessment of children's dietary practices | |
P478 | volume | 61 |
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Q34623655 | Assessment of interobserver reliability in nutrition studies that use direct observation of school meals |
Q36757092 | Body mass index, sex, interview protocol, and children's accuracy for reporting kilocalories observed eaten at school meals |
Q36784830 | Children's Dietary Recalls from Three Validation Studies: Types of Intrusion Vary with Retention Interval |
Q51979919 | Children's dietary recalls: the salience of entree and liking for foods on accuracy and order of reporting. |
Q35758249 | Children's dietary reporting accuracy over multiple 24-hour recalls varies by body mass index category |
Q36983822 | Children's recalls from five dietary-reporting validation studies. Intrusions in correctly reported and misreported options in school breakfast reports |
Q40006162 | Children's school-breakfast reports and school-lunch reports (in 24-h dietary recalls): conventional and reporting-error-sensitive measures show inconsistent accuracy results for retention interval and breakfast location |
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Q36755333 | Conclusions about children's reporting accuracy for energy and macronutrients over multiple interviews depend on the analytic approach for comparing reported information to reference information |
Q31106737 | Conventional analyses of data from dietary validation studies may misestimate reporting accuracy: illustration from a study of the effect of interview modality on children's reporting accuracy |
Q35992544 | Effectiveness of Prompts on Fourth-Grade Children's Dietary Recall Accuracy Depends on Retention Interval and Varies by Gender |
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Q36440800 | Evaluation of a Web-Based Food Record for Children Using Direct Unobtrusive Lunch Observations: A Validation Study. |
Q31135723 | Fourth-Grade Children's Reporting Accuracy for Amounts Eaten at School-Provided Meals: Insight from a Reporting-Error-Sensitive Analytic Approach Applied to Validation Study Data |
Q36726591 | Fourth-grade children are less accurate in reporting school breakfast than school lunch during 24-hour dietary recalls |
Q37253267 | Fourth-grade children's dietary recall accuracy is influenced by retention interval (target period and interview time). |
Q38973496 | Fourth-grade children's dietary reporting accuracy by meal component: Results from a validation study that manipulated retention interval and prompts |
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Q36102618 | Shortening the retention interval of 24-hour dietary recalls increases fourth-grade children's accuracy for reporting energy and macronutrient intake at school meals |
Q36979690 | Sources of intrusions in children's dietary recalls from a validation study of order prompts |
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Q37041953 | Validation-study conclusions from dietary reports by fourth-grade children observed eating school meals are generalisable to dietary reports by comparable children not observed |
Q24802331 | Why combine diet and physical activity in the same international research society? |
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