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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2019 May 19;236(11):3111–3124. doi: 10.1007/s00213-019-05262-8

Table 1.

Parameter estimates for multi-level model of change in estimated blood alcohol concentration (eBAC) over time by alcohol use disorder symptoms.

Est. 95% CI t

Intercept .032 [.015, .049] 3.70***
AUD symptoms −.001 [−.004, .001] −1.04
Slope-60 .011 [−.003, .025] 1.50
Slope-300 −.002 [−.022, .017] −0.23
AUD symptoms x slope-60 .009 [.006, .013] 5.33***
AUD symptoms x slope-300 −.012 [−.017, −.007] −4.91***
Study Day .0002 [−.001, .002] 0.29
Weekday (Sat. is reference)
 Sunday −.011 [−.025, .002] −1.67
 Monday −.011 [−.026, .003] −1.52
 Tuesday −.023 [−.039, −.008] −2.95**
 Wednesday −.017 [−.032, −.002] −2.30*
 Thursday −.016 [−.031, −.002] −2.19*
 Friday −.017 [−.029, −.006] −3.03**
Hour of day −.0004 [−.001, .0001] −1.43
Age −.003 [−.005, −.0005] −2.38*
Report number −.006 [−.016, .005] −1.06

Note. N = 75 individuals, 799 observations used. Degrees of freedom were calculated using the Kenward-Roger approximation. Covariates in the model consisted of age (centered), whether participants made only 3 begin-/end-drink report pairs vs. unlimited drink reports (report number), day of study, weekday, and hour of day. AUD = alcohol use disorder.

*

p < .05.

**

p < .01.

***

p < .001.