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A clinical psychologist wants to systematically evaluate whether a new behavioral intervention produces a strong, consistent change in a specific patient's daily habits. Based on the goals of this study, a single-subject research design would be an appropriate choice.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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What is a primary goal that makes single-subject research designs particularly effective for evaluating treatments on individuals?
Single-subject research designs are generally ineffective for clinicians seeking to conduct systematic, quantitative research because these designs focus on only one patient at a time.
A researcher is deciding whether a single-subject design is appropriate for each of the following scenarios. Match each scenario to the primary reason that makes a single-subject design the most suitable choice in that situation.
A clinician aims to conduct systematic quantitative research to evaluate a treatment's effect on an individual patient's behavior. Arrange the following steps in the logical order required to analyze the intervention’s effectiveness and establish experimental control.
A clinician working with a single patient who has a rare speech disorder wants to construct a research project to evaluate a new vocal-exercise therapy. To create a systematic, quantitative study that effectively evaluates the therapy's impact while focusing on a socially significant and consistent effect for this individual, which of the following research designs should the clinician implement?
In which of the following scenarios is a single-subject research design often considered the only viable choice for conducting systematic quantitative research?
A clinical psychologist wants to systematically evaluate whether a new behavioral intervention produces a strong, consistent change in a specific patient's daily habits. Based on the goals of this study, a single-subject research design would be an appropriate choice.
Match each research scenario with the specific rationale for applying a single-subject design in that context.
Arrange the following criteria in the logical order of analysis used to justify applying a single-subject research design, moving from the initial research focus to the final evaluation of the treatment's impact.
A researcher critiquing a clinical study argues that a group-average methodology is insufficient for evaluating a treatment's impact on a patient with a rare behavioral disorder. To provide a rigorous, systematic, and quantitative evaluation of the intervention's effectiveness for this specific individual, the researcher concludes that a(n) _____ design is the most appropriate choice.
When evaluating the scientific rigor of a treatment for a single patient, a clinician must determine the most appropriate method for generating systematic quantitative evidence rather than relying on anecdotal reports; in this scenario, the application of a(n) _____ design is often the only viable choice.
Explain why single-subject research designs are particularly valuable for clinicians working with individual clients, and describe the specific conditions regarding treatment effects and behavior focus under which these designs are most effective.
Based on the provided context, justify why Dr. Aris should apply a single-subject research design for Leo's treatment evaluation, and identify what characteristics of Leo's case and the treatment's goals align with this methodology.
Analyze the text to distinguish between a scenario where a clinician uses a single-subject design for systematic quantitative research versus a scenario where a researcher might find single-subject designs inappropriate based on the desired strength and consistency of the treatment effects.