A clinical psychologist is developing a new mindfulness-based intervention for chronic pain. They aim to design a comprehensive research program that first identifies the specific duration (minutes per day) required to produce significant pain reduction for individual patients, and then validates whether this intervention is more effective than a standard relaxation treatment for the general population. Which of the following research architectures represents the most effective synthesis of single-subject and group methodologies as complementary tools to achieve this dual goal?
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Strengths of Single-Subject Research
Strengths of Group Research
Which of the following best describes the relationship between single-subject and group research methodologies?
A researcher investigating a new clinical therapy claims that their group research design is universally superior to any single-subject approach. In psychological research, this claim is considered accurate.
Match each research scenario with the methodology that is most appropriate for answering the specific question being asked.
A psychologist is evaluating a new technique for reducing test anxiety. Arrange the following research phases in the logical order a researcher would follow to integrate single-subject and group methodologies as complementary tools to establish both individual-level impact and population-wide results.
A researcher argues that group research is inherently more scientific than single-subject research because it accounts for individual variability through averaging. This critique is methodologically unsound because it fails to evaluate the two approaches as ______ tools that are each suited for answering fundamentally different types of research questions.
A clinical psychologist is developing a new mindfulness-based intervention for chronic pain. They aim to design a comprehensive research program that first identifies the specific duration (minutes per day) required to produce significant pain reduction for individual patients, and then validates whether this intervention is more effective than a standard relaxation treatment for the general population. Which of the following research architectures represents the most effective synthesis of single-subject and group methodologies as complementary tools to achieve this dual goal?
Single-subject and group research are best understood as ______ methodologies rather than competing ones, as they each possess distinct strengths and weaknesses.
Match each research goal or strength with the psychological research design that is best suited for it, illustrating how these two methodologies serve as complementary tools.
A research group is investigating a new cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for insomnia. They analyze two goals: (1) determining the precise timeline of daily sleep improvements for a specific patient under treatment, and (2) comparing the average sleep improvement of the treatment group against a control group. If the researchers conclude that they must choose only one methodology because group designs are universally superior to single-subject designs for both goals, their analysis of these research methods is correct.
A clinical psychologist wants to design and evaluate a new intervention for social anxiety. To maximize scientific rigor, the psychologist decides to combine single-subject and group methodologies. Order the following steps to reflect the most logical progression for evaluating the intervention, starting from testing individual-level mechanisms to validating population-level effectiveness.