
Non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) is typically assessed using single item questionnaires or checklists of common behaviours, but preliminary research suggests that checklists may produce higher prevalence rates. In two pre-registered studies (combined n = 1364), we tested whether greater memory cueing afforded by behavioural checklists, inattentive responding, or individual differences can account for this discrepancy between assessment methods.
behavioural assessment, NSSI, reliability, consistency, self-injury, measure, agreement
behavioural assessment, NSSI, reliability, consistency, self-injury, measure, agreement
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