from where did single-case research emerge? what is the logic behind scds? what is high quality...
TRANSCRIPT
From where did single-case research emerge?
What is the logic behind SCDs?
What is high quality research? What are the quality indicators for SCDs? SPCD 619
Week 2
Foundations of Single-case Design
Psychology
Biology
Medicine
Single-Case Design
Applied Behavior Analysis
Pavlov: Respondent (classical) Conditioning
Food (UCS) paired with CS (tone) = Salivation (Response)Tone (CS) = Salivation (Response)
History of Applied Behavior Analysis
1930s to today Experimental analysis of
behavior B.F. Skinner
Mid-1950s to 1960s Laboratory with children and
adults Don Baer, Sidney Bijou,
Allyon & Michael 1960s to present
“Real world” applications, including educational settings
Broad application
Applied Behavior Analysis
“systematic application of behavioral principles to change socially significant behavior to a meaningful degree”(p. 531, Alberto & Troutman, 2003)
Use of these principles allows us to establish a functional relationship between a behavior and an intervention.
Characteristics of ABA (Baer, Wolf, & Risley. (1968)
Applied
Behavioral
Analytic
Technological
Conceptually systematic
Effective
Generalizable
Logic/Foundations of Single-Case Research Focus on causation:
Experimental vs. correlational or descriptive Pinpoint factors responsible for behavior change
Focus on individual vs. group performance (usually)
Measurement: Overt (physical) behaviors Direct observation Continuous (repeated) measurement Operationalized definitions of variables
Inductive approach Social (clinical) significance Intervention oriented (experimental)
Research Questions that can be answered with SCDs Does the independent variable produce a change
in the dependent variable? (demonstration) (evaluating IV effects relative to baseline)
Comparison of effectiveness of one or more IVs (comparison) (does intervention A or B result in a greater increase in social initiations?)
Which component of an IV accounts the change in the DV? (component analysis)
How “much” of an IV is needed to produce a meaningful change in the DV? (parametric)
Quality Indicators for Single-case Research Studies: Description of Participants, Setting(s), & Selection Process
Operational descriptions Specific, precise language Allow for replication
Precise descriptions of criteria used to select participants
Quality Indicators: Dependent Variables (DV)
DV is an important target for the participants
Operational definitions of each DV Operational Definition
Measures that allow direct observation and empirical summary
Measurement procedures are specifically and clearly defined
DV(s) are measured repeatedly Assessed IOA for each DV; IOA meets
minimum standards
Operational Definition
“agreed upon description of observable and measurable characteristics of the motor performance of the behavior . . . Clearly stated so that everyone can agree that is has or has not been performed” (p. 31, Alberto & Troutman).
Includes examples and non-examples of the behavior
Example of operationalizing a DVName: On-task behaviorDefinition: Orientation of the student
toward the appropriate object or personExamples include: following directions
given by the teacher, paying attention to the speaker (peer or adult), and working on assigned tasks.
Non-examples include: playing Free Cell during independent reading activity on computer; talking about girlfriend during science cooperative learning group; staring out of window during independent seat work
Quality Indicators: Independent Variables (IV)
Operational definitions Explicit descriptions of
materials and procedures Systematic manipulation of IV Measurement of treatment
fidelity (procedural implementation or procedural fidelity)
Quality Indicators: Internal Validity
Minimum of three demonstrations of experimental control at three different points in time
Control of threats to internal validity
Quality Indicators: External Validity
Utilizes multiple participants, settings, materials, and/or targets (behaviors)
Replication occurs across multiple studies and researchers
Uses operational descriptions
Quality Indicators: Social Validity
Target behaviors (DVs) are socially important
Degree of change in DV after intervention is socially significant
Intervention is acceptable to participants and practitioners
Implementation of the intervention is practical and can be used by “typical” practitioners/parents
WWC Design Standards: Nine Defining Features of SCD
1 Experimental Control2 Individual is unit of analysis3 IV is actively manipulated4 DV is measured repeatedly5 Baseline6 Design controls for threats to internal
validity7 Use of visual analysis (statistical
analysis is emerging)8 Systematic replication9 Experimental flexibility