| 1 | Questions in self‐selection studies used in consumer research for nonprescription drug candidates: Limitations and recommendations | 2.8 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 2 | Using Attributes of Survey Items to Predict Response Times May Benefit Survey Research | 1.3 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 3 | A population-based investigation of participation rate and self-selection bias in momentary data capture and survey studies | 1.8 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 4 | Shedding light on participant selection bias in Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) studies: Findings from an internet panel study | 2.4 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 5 | Little evidence for consistent initial elevation bias in self-reported momentary affect: A coordinated analysis of ecological momentary assessment studies. | 1.6 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 6 | Quality of Survey Responses at Older Ages Predicts Cognitive Decline and Mortality Risk | 0.1 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 7 | Momentary social interactions and affect in later life varied across the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic | 2.4 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 8 | Global reports of well-being overestimate aggregated daily states of well-being | 3.1 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 9 | III. Detecting Treatment Effects in Clinical Trials With Different Indices of Pain Intensity Derived From Ecological Momentary Assessment | 1.3 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 10 | High-resolution, field approaches for assessing pain: Ecological Momentary Assessment | 4.4 | 48 | Citations (PDF) |
| 11 | II. Indices of Pain Intensity Derived From Ecological Momentary Assessments and Their Relationships With Patient Functioning: An Individual Patient Data Meta-analysis | 1.3 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 12 | I. Indices of Pain Intensity Derived From Ecological Momentary Assessments: Rationale and Stakeholder Preferences | 1.3 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 13 | The Effect of Training on Participant Adherence With a Reporting Time Frame for Momentary Subjective Experiences in Ecological Momentary Assessment: Cognitive Interview Study | 2.0 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 14 | Varied and unexpected changes in the well-being of seniors in the United States amid the COVID-19 pandemic | 2.4 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 15 | Influence of ecological momentary assessment study design features on reported willingness to participate and perceptions of potential research studies: an experimental study | 2.0 | 37 | Citations (PDF) |
| 16 | Explaining age differences in the memory-experience gap. | 1.6 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 17 | Vague Quantifiers Demonstrate Little Susceptibility to Frame of Reference Effects | 1.9 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 18 | A combination of pain indices based on momentary assessments can predict placebo response in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome | 4.4 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 19 | Decoding the mystery of American pain reveals a warning for the future | 7.6 | 87 | Citations (PDF) |
| 20 | Heightened Stress in Employed Individuals Is Linked to Altered Variability and Inertia in Emotions | 2.4 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 21 | Are retired people higher in experiential wellbeing than working older adults? A time use approach. | 1.9 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 22 | Nostalgia and well-being in daily life: An ecological validity perspective. | 3.0 | 132 | Citations (PDF) |
| 23 | Age patterns in subjective well-being are partially accounted for by psychological and social factors associated with aging | 2.4 | 30 | Citations (PDF) |
| 24 | Evaluating the Effect of Daily Diary Instructional Phrases on Respondents’ Recall Time Frames: Survey Experiment | 4.9 | 13 | Citations (PDF) |
| 25 | Comparability of Emotion Dynamics Derived From Ecological Momentary Assessments, Daily Diaries, and the Day Reconstruction Method: Observational Study | 4.9 | 35 | Citations (PDF) |
| 26 | Conservatives Report Greater Meaning in Life Than Liberals | 4.2 | 52 | Citations (PDF) |
| 27 | Do people with arthritis differ from healthy controls in their internal comparison standards for self-reports of health, fatigue, and pain? | 2.6 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 28 | Response styles confound the age gradient of four health and well-being outcomes | 2.9 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 29 | PROMIS® Adult Health Profiles: Efficient Short-Form Measures of Seven Health Domains | 2.0 | 586 | Citations (PDF) |
| 30 | MTurk participants have substantially lower evaluative subjective well-being than other survey participants | 8.1 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 31 | What Affects the Completion of Ecological Momentary Assessments in Chronic Pain Research? An Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis | 4.9 | 102 | Citations (PDF) |
| 32 | Ecological Momentary Assessment Methodology in Chronic Pain Research: A Systematic Review | 1.3 | 205 | Citations (PDF) |
| 33 | Temporal dynamics of pain: an application of regime-switching models to ecological momentary assessments in patients with rheumatic diseasesPain, 2018, 159, 1346-1358 | 4.4 | 21 | Citations (PDF) |
| 34 | The effects of time frames on self-report | 2.4 | 54 | Citations (PDF) |
| 35 | Age Effects of Frames of Reference in Self-Reports of Health, Well-Being, Fatigue and Pain | 1.9 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 36 | Psychological stress declines rapidly from age 50 in the United States: Yet another well-being paradox | 2.2 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 37 | Careless responding in internet-based quality of life assessments | 2.1 | 52 | Citations (PDF) |
| 38 | Frames of Reference in Self-Reports of Health, Well-Being, Fatigue, and Pain: a Qualitative Examination | 1.9 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 39 | Compliance With Mobile Ecological Momentary Assessment Protocols in Children and Adolescents: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis | 4.9 | 292 | Citations (PDF) |
| 40 | Comparison of Daily versus Weekly Recording of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease Symptoms in Patients with a Partial Response to Proton Pump Inhibitor Therapy | 2.0 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 41 | Clinic Blood Pressure Underestimates Ambulatory Blood Pressure in an Untreated Employer-Based US Population | 25.2 | 82 | Citations (PDF) |
| 42 | The meaning of vaguely quantified frequency response options on a quality of life scale depends on respondents’ medical status and age | 2.1 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 43 | Commuting episodes in the United States: Their correlates with experiential wellbeing from the American Time Use Survey | 3.8 | 51 | Citations (PDF) |
| 44 | Understanding context effects for a measure of life evaluation: how responses matter | 1.3 | 62 | Citations (PDF) |
| 45 | Response to Lucas, Oishi, and Diener | 1.3 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 46 | PROMIS fatigue, pain intensity, pain interference, pain behavior, physical function, depression, anxiety, and anger scales demonstrate ecological validity | 3.7 | 189 | Citations (PDF) |
| 47 | PROMIS measures of pain, fatigue, negative affect, physical function, and social function demonstrated clinical validity across a range of chronic conditions | 3.7 | 433 | Citations (PDF) |
| 48 | PROMIS Fatigue Item Bank had Clinical Validity across Diverse Chronic Conditions | 3.7 | 227 | Citations (PDF) |
| 49 | The Measure Matters: An Investigation of Evaluative and Experience-Based Measures of Wellbeing in Time Use Data | 2.6 | 55 | Citations (PDF) |
| 50 | Experiential Wellbeing Data from the American Time Use Survey: Comparisons with Other Methods and Analytic Illustrations with Age and Income | 2.6 | 46 | Citations (PDF) |
| 51 | Mixed emotions across the adult life span in the United States. | 1.6 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 52 | Health-related quality of life measurement in oncology: Advances and opportunities. | 2.4 | 59 | Citations (PDF) |
| 53 | Subjective wellbeing, health, and ageing | 52.8 | 2,022 | Citations (PDF) |
| 54 | Ambulatory and diary methods can facilitate the measurement of patient-reported outcomes | 2.1 | 91 | Citations (PDF) |
| 55 | Evaluative and hedonic wellbeing among those with and without children at home | 7.6 | 90 | Citations (PDF) |
| 56 | Single-day Pain Assessments as Clinical Outcomes | 2.4 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 57 | Linking Fatigue Measures on a Common Reporting Metric | 0.9 | 40 | Citations (PDF) |
| 58 | Distinguishing between frequency and intensity of health-related symptoms from diary assessments | 2.2 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 59 | Method of administration of PROMIS scales did not significantly impact score level, reliability, or validity | 3.7 | 111 | Citations (PDF) |
| 60 | Ecological validity and clinical utility of Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®) instruments for detecting premenstrual symptoms of depression, anger, and fatigue | 2.2 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 61 | Effect of stimulus onset delay in visual search by monkeys | 0.2 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 62 | Pittsburgh and Epworth Sleep Scale Items: Accuracy of Ratings Across Different Reporting Periods | 2.1 | 48 | Citations (PDF) |
| 63 | Temporal trends in symptom experience predict the accuracy of recall PROs | 2.2 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 64 | Two Happiness Puzzles | 10.5 | 174 | Citations (PDF) |
| 65 | Bringing the Laboratory and Clinic to the Community: Mobile Technologies for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention | 23.2 | 147 | Citations (PDF) |
| 66 | Validity and Reliability of Patient‐Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Instruments in Osteoarthritis | 3.0 | 145 | Citations (PDF) |
| 67 | Difference in method of administration did not significantly impact item response: an IRT-based analysis from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) initiative | 2.1 | 64 | Citations (PDF) |
| 68 | Validation of a Brief Yesterday Measure of Hedonic Well-Being and Daily Activities: Comparison with the Day Reconstruction Method | 2.6 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 69 | Measuring daily fatigue using a brief scale adapted from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®) | 2.1 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 70 | Ambulatory Monitoring of Biobehavioral Processes in Health and Disease | 2.2 | 26 | Citations (PDF) |
| 71 | Expanding Options for Developing Outcome Measures From Momentary Assessment Data | 2.2 | 42 | Citations (PDF) |
| 72 | Obesity and Pain Are Associated in the United States | 4.2 | 203 | Citations (PDF) |
| 73 | Day-of-week mood patterns in the United States: On the existence of ‘Blue Monday’, ‘Thank God it's Friday’ and weekend effects | 3.1 | 146 | Citations (PDF) |
| 74 | Psychometric characteristics of daily diaries for the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®): a preliminary investigation | 2.1 | 35 | Citations (PDF) |
| 75 | Demographic correlates of fatigue in the US general population: Results from the patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) initiative | 2.2 | 109 | Citations (PDF) |
| 76 | Engaging and disengaging work conditions, momentary experiences and cortisol response | 1.8 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 77 | A Comparison of Affect Ratings Obtained with Ecological Momentary Assessment and the Day Reconstruction Method | 2.6 | 177 | Citations (PDF) |
| 78 | Interference with activities due to pain and fatigue: accuracy of ratings across different reporting periods | 2.1 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 79 | A snapshot of the age distribution of psychological well-being in the United States | 7.6 | 656 | Citations (PDF) |
| 80 | The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) developed and tested its first wave of adult self-reported health outcome item banks: 2005–2008 | 3.7 | 4,533 | Citations (PDF) |
| 81 | Single momentary assessments are not reliable outcomes for clinical trials | 1.6 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 82 | Validity of average, minimum, and maximum end-of-day recall assessments of pain and fatigue | 1.6 | 35 | Citations (PDF) |
| 83 | Self-reported fatigue: one dimension or more? Lessons from the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy—Fatigue (FACIT-F) questionnaire | 2.4 | 100 | Citations (PDF) |
| 84 | Classical test theory and item response theory/Rasch model to assess differences between patient-reported fatigue using 7-day and 4-week recall periods | 3.7 | 39 | Citations (PDF) |
| 85 | Memories of yesterday’s emotions: Does the valence of experience affect the memory-experience gap? | 1.9 | 166 | Citations (PDF) |
| 86 | Cognitive interviewing in the evaluation of fatigue items: Results from the patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) | 2.1 | 91 | Citations (PDF) |
| 87 | The accuracy of pain and fatigue items across different reporting periods | 4.4 | 268 | Citations (PDF) |
| 88 | Assessment of pain: a community-based diary survey in the USA | 52.8 | 126 | Citations (PDF) |
| 89 | Ecological Momentary Assessment | 12.6 | 5,383 | Citations (PDF) |
| 90 | Context Effects in Survey Ratings of Health, Symptoms, and Satisfaction | 1.8 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 91 | Time Use and Subjective Well-Being in France and the U.S. | 2.6 | 135 | Citations (PDF) |
| 92 | Evaluation of Item Candidates | 1.8 | 684 | Citations (PDF) |
| 93 | A Systematic Review of Measures Used to Assess Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain in Clinical and Randomized Controlled Clinical Trials | 1.3 | 131 | Citations (PDF) |
| 94 | Real-Time Data Collection for Pain: Appraisal and Current Status | 2.1 | 126 | Citations (PDF) |
| 95 | Feasibility and utility of an electronic diary to assess self-report symptoms in patients with inflammatory bowel disease | 2.7 | 27 | Citations (PDF) |
| 96 | A population approach to the study of emotion: Diurnal rhythms of a working day examined with the day reconstruction method. | 1.9 | 188 | Citations (PDF) |
| 97 | Trait anxiety moderates the impact of performance pressure on salivary cortisol in everyday life | 2.8 | 86 | Citations (PDF) |
| 98 | Variability of Momentary Pain Predicts Recall of Weekly Pain: A Consequence of the Peak (or Salience) Memory Heuristic | 3.6 | 189 | Citations (PDF) |
| 99 | Toward National Well-Being Accounts | 10.5 | 478 | Citations (PDF) |
| 100 | The feasibility and effectiveness of an expressive writing intervention for rheumatoid arthritis via home-based videotaped instructions | 2.7 | 82 | Citations (PDF) |
| 101 | Associations among pain intensity, sensory characteristics, affective qualities, and activity limitations in patients with chronic pain: A momentary, within-person perspective | 1.3 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 102 | Understanding recall of weekly pain from a momentary assessment perspective: absolute agreement, between- and within-person consistency, and judged change in weekly pain | 4.4 | 223 | Citations (PDF) |
| 103 | Perceived Work Overload and Chronic Worrying Predict Weekend–Weekday Differences in the Cortisol Awakening Response | 2.2 | 353 | Citations (PDF) |
| 104 | Ecological Momentary Assessment Research in Behavioral medicine | 2.9 | 379 | Citations (PDF) |
| 105 | Signaling does not adequately improve diary compliance | 2.7 | 131 | Citations (PDF) |
| 106 | Measuring clinical pain in chronic widespread pain: selected methodological issues | 4.1 | 123 | Citations (PDF) |
| 107 | Patient compliance with paper and electronic diaries | 2.8 | 824 | Citations (PDF) |
| 108 | Effectiveness of spouse involvement in cognitive behavioral therapy for binge eating disorder | 4.1 | 54 | Citations (PDF) |
| 109 | Intensive momentary reporting of pain with an electronic diary: reactivity, compliance, and patient satisfaction | 4.4 | 255 | Citations (PDF) |
| 110 | Characteristics of binge eating among women in the community seeking treatment for binge eating or weight loss | 2.3 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 111 | Does Emotional Non-Expressiveness or Avoidance Interfere with Writing about Stressful Life Events? An Analysis in Patients with Chronic Illness | 2.7 | 26 | Citations (PDF) |
| 112 | Patient non-compliance with paper diaries | 0.1 | 704 | Citations (PDF) |
| 113 | Physiologic Markers of Chronic Stress in Premenopausal, Middle-Aged Women | 2.2 | 112 | Citations (PDF) |
| 114 | Does ecological momentary assessment improve cognitive behavioural therapy for binge eating disorder? A pilot study | 3.6 | 40 | Citations (PDF) |
| 115 | Capturing momentary, self-report data: A proposal for reporting guidelines | 2.7 | 674 | Citations (PDF) |
| 116 | Health Psychology: 2001-2006. | 1.7 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 117 | Does momentary assessment detect binge eating in overweight women that is denied at interview? | 3.6 | 82 | Citations (PDF) |
| 118 | Individual differences in the diurnal cycle of salivary free cortisol: a replication of flattened cycles for some individuals | 2.8 | 303 | Citations (PDF) |
| 119 | Relaxation Training and Cortisol Secretion in Adult Asthmatics | 2.7 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 120 | A naturalistic evaluation of cortisol secretion in persons with fibromyalgia and rheumatoid arthritis | 6.0 | 92 | Citations (PDF) |
| 121 | Impact of gender and having children in the household on ambulatory blood pressure in work and nonwork settings: A partial replication and new findings | 2.7 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 122 | Gender Differences in Coping: A Comparison of Trait and Momentary Assessments | 0.8 | 47 | Citations (PDF) |
| 123 | Effects of Writing About Stressful Experiences on Symptom Reduction in Patients With Asthma or Rheumatoid Arthritis | 17.1 | 707 | Citations (PDF) |
| 124 | Title is missing! | 2.5 | 47 | Citations (PDF) |
| 125 | Rheumatoid arthritis patients show weather sensitivity in daily life, but the relationship is not clinically significant | 4.4 | 57 | Citations (PDF) |
| 126 | The Differential Impact of Training Stress and Final Examination Stress on Herpesvirus Latency at the United States Military Academy at West Point | 4.7 | 121 | Citations (PDF) |
| 127 | Anger Expression and Ambulatory Blood Pressure | 2.2 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 128 | The effect of tape-recorded relaxation training on well-being, symptoms, and peak expiratory flow rate in adult asthmatics: A pilot study | 2.7 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 129 | STRESSORS AND MOOD MEASURED ON A MOMENTARY BASIS ARE ASSOCIATED WITH SALIVARY CORTISOL SECRETION | 2.8 | 407 | Citations (PDF) |
| 130 | Eating disturbances in white and minority female dieters 1998, 24, 395-403 | | 51 | Citations (PDF) |
| 131 | Introduction to the special section: Ecological momentary assessment in health psychology. | 1.7 | 150 | Citations (PDF) |
| 132 | The experience of rheumatoid arthritis pain and fatigue: Examining momentary reports and correlates over one week | 6.0 | 208 | Citations (PDF) |
| 133 | Individual differences in the diurnal cycle of cortisol | 2.8 | 304 | Citations (PDF) |
| 134 | Behavioral Influences on Diurnal Blood Pressure Rhythms | 4.1 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 135 | Reactive effects of diary self-assessment in chronic pain patients | 4.4 | 103 | Citations (PDF) |
| 136 | Are stress-induced immunological changes mediated by mood? A closer look at how both desirable and undesirable daily events influence siga antibody | 1.5 | 26 | Citations (PDF) |
| 137 | Does humor moderate the effects of experimentally-induced stress? | 2.7 | 89 | Citations (PDF) |
| 138 | Daily Mood Variability: Form of Diurnal Patterns and Determinants of Diurnal Patterns | 2.3 | 89 | Citations (PDF) |
| 139 | Persistent High Cortisol Responses to Repeated Psychological Stress in a Subpopulation of Healthy Men | 2.2 | 547 | Citations (PDF) |
| 140 | Effect of Chronic Stress Associated With Unemployment on Salivary Cortisol | 2.2 | 267 | Citations (PDF) |
| 141 | Are There Really Gender Differences in Coping?: A Reconsideration of Previous Data and Results from a Daily Study | 0.8 | 49 | Citations (PDF) |
| 142 | Ecological Momentary Assessment (Ema) in Behavioral Medicine | 2.7 | 1,818 | Citations (PDF) |
| 143 | The stress-eating paradox: Multiple daily measurements in adult males and females | 2.7 | 200 | Citations (PDF) |
| 144 | Stress and humoral immunity: A review of the human studies | 1.7 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 145 | Coping with daily work problems. Contributions of problem content, appraisals, and person factors | 7.1 | 62 | Citations (PDF) |
| 146 | Effects of mental stressors on mitogen induced lymphocyte responses in the laboratory | 2.7 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 147 | Daily events and mood prior to the onset of respiratory illness episodes: A non-replication of the 3-5 day ‘desirability dip’ | 1.1 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 148 | Development of Common Cold Symptoms Following Experimental Rhinovirus Infection is Related to Prior Stressful Life Events | 2.5 | 146 | Citations (PDF) |
| 149 | Reflections On The Intensive Measurement Of Stress, Coping, And Mood, With An Emphasis On Daily Measures | 2.7 | 44 | Citations (PDF) |
| 150 | "Emotional disclosure about traumas and its relation to health: Effects of previous disclosure and trauma severity": Correction to Greenberg and Stone. | 3.0 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 151 | The relationship between daily events and mood: The mood measure may matter | 1.8 | 57 | Citations (PDF) |
| 152 | An alternative statistical treatment for summarizing the central tendency of replicate assay data | 1.5 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 153 | Measuring Daily Events and Experiences: Decisions for the Researcher | 3.2 | 229 | Citations (PDF) |
| 154 | The effect of exercise on normal mood | 2.2 | 61 | Citations (PDF) |
| 155 | Secretory IgA as a Measure of Immunocompetence | 1.2 | 67 | Citations (PDF) |
| 156 | Changes in Daily Event Frequency Precede Episodes of Physical Symptoms | 1.2 | 83 | Citations (PDF) |
| 157 | Daily Versus Major Life Events as Predictors of Symptom Frequency: A Replication Study | 2.4 | 39 | Citations (PDF) |
| 158 | Meaning of daily mood assessments. | 3.0 | 114 | Citations (PDF) |
| 159 | Prospective and cross-sectional mood reports offer no evidence of a "blue Monday" phenomenon. | 3.0 | 120 | Citations (PDF) |
| 160 | New measure of daily coping: Development and preliminary results. | 3.0 | 609 | Citations (PDF) |
| 161 | Marital event appraisals and frequencies: A comparison of distressed and nondistressed husbands | 1.5 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 162 | Hypochondriasis and tendency to adopt the sick role as moderators of the relationship between life‐events and somatic symptomatology | 1.1 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 163 | Cognitive and attentional deficits in children vulnerable to psychopathology | 2.7 | 99 | Citations (PDF) |
| 164 | The association between perceptions of daily experiences and self- and spouse-rated mood | 2.5 | 79 | Citations (PDF) |
| 165 | Cognitive Slippage in Children Vulnerable to Schizophrenia | 2.7 | 21 | Citations (PDF) |