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Single- Subject Research Designs
Chapter 14
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Single- subject designs
Single- subject designs, or single- case designs, are research designs that use the results from a single participant or subject to establish the existence of cause- and- effect relationships.
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Phases and phase changes
A phase is a series of observations of the same individual under the same conditions. When no treatment is being administered, the observations are called baseline observations.
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Visual Inspection Techniques
Unfortunately, there are no absolute, objective standards for determining how much of a change in pattern is sufficient to provide a convincing demonstration of a treatment effect. The most convincing results occur when the change in pattern is immediate and large.
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4 types of change Change in average level Immediate change in level
Change in trend Latency of change.
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Change in average level
Change in trend Immediate change in level Latency in Change
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The problem with single subject design
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THE ABAB REVERSAL DESIGN
the majority of single- subject research studies use ABAB design; consists of four phases: a baseline phase ( A), followed by treatment ( B), then a return to baseline ( A), and finally a repetition of the treatment phase ( B).
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Effective A= no treatment
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Not Effective
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Variations on the ABAB Design
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1- B&B1 not working use C
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2- B not working add C B= Graduated exposure C= Reinforcement
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3- MULTIPLE- BASELINE DESIGNS
1- Eliminates the need for a return to baseline and therefore, 2- Is particularly well suited for evaluating treatments with long- lasting or permanent effects.
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3- MULTIPLE- BASELINE DESIGNS
Examples A therapist uses the same method for 2 different behaviors (across behaviors) For one behavior that is exhibited in 2 different situations. (across situations) A teacher uses the same method on 2 different individuals (across subjects)
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Person1 Person2 2 different students
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Yelling Crying 2 different behaviors
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School Home 2 different situations.
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Weaknesses of the Multiple- Baseline Design?
a treatment applied to one behavior may generalize and produce changes in the second behavior. one behavior may show a large and immediate change, but the second behavior may show only a minor or gradual change when the treatment is introduced one INDIVIDUAL may show a large and immediate change, but the second behavior may show only a minor or gradual change when the treatment is introduced
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4- Dismantling design A dismantling design, also called a component- analysis design, consists of a series of phases in which each phase adds or subtracts one component of a complex treatment to determine how each component contributes to the overall treatment effectiveness.
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Example
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5- The Changing- Criterion Design
The criterion level is changed from one phase to the next.
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Smoking Treatment
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6-The Alternating- Treatments Design
In an alternating- treatments design, also called a discrete-trials design, two ( or more) treatment conditions are randomly alternated from one observation to the next.
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Example - Alternate weeks
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Group Discussion Suppose you are interested in performing an observational study of kindness (kind behavior) among students in a school. Describe one method to quantify this behavior: that is, explain how you could convert the observations into numerical scores. In most research studies, statistical techniques are used to rule out chance as a plausible explanation for the results. In single-subject research, how is chance (or coincidence) ruled out as a plausible explanation for the observed treatment effects?
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