Abstract
Six hundred and twenty-six participants from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) were interviewed via telephone ret- rospectively about life course events by either computer-assisted (CATI) event history calendar (EHC) or standardized CATI conventional ques- tionnaire (CQ) methods, randomly assigned. Experimental retrospective reports, for a reference period up to 30 years, were validated against reports provided annually from the PSID core interviews. Data quality outcome measures included variables associated with marriage, cohab- itation, employment, unemployment, residential changes, and cigarette smoking. The EHC provided higher quality retrospective reports for co- habitation, employment, unemployment, and smoking histories; the CQ provided better data quality for marriage history, although what variable was being measured, instead of which method was being used, had the biggest impact on differences in data quality. Both EHC and CQ inter- views lasted on average around one hour, with the EHC interviews being on average 10 percent longer. Interviewers preferred the EHC interviews. In both EHC and CQ conditions, respondents generally enjoyed the in- terviews, and did not find questions difficult. The costs and benefits of
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