Deck 12: Using Single-Subject Designs

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Question
The pioneering experimentalists:

A) avoided the single-subject approach because it was not rigorous enough.
B) controlled error variance by averaging subjects within groups.
C) managed to identify important psychological phenomena.
D) None of the answers is correct.
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Question
Despite intersubject variability, the within-subjects approach worked because:

A) a large number of observations were collected from a single subject.
B) incidental factors that might contribute unwanted variability were rigidly controlled.
C) the investigators focused their attentions on powerful variables.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Question
_____ was pioneered by Sir Frances Galton.

A) The single-subject approach
B) The application of statistical techniques to the study of individual differences
C) Early psychophysical research
D) Laboratory research
Question
With the advent of the group approach, the single-subject approach:

A) waned in popularity.
B) became more popular.
C) continued to remain as popular.
D) died for a couple of years.
Question
B. F. Skinner and his followers established their own journal, the _____, because they were unwilling to use inferential statistics to establish the reliability of their findings, making it increasingly difficult to get their results published.

A) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
B) Journal of Experimental Psychology
C) Journal of the Psychonomic Society
D) Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
Question
The _____ design was developed primarily by B. F. Skinner and his followers.

A) discrete trials
B) baseline
C) interrupted-trials
D) averaged-baseline
Question
In the simplest case, a baseline design involves exposing a subject to a(n) _____ phase to assess the subject's behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment.

A) baseline
B) treatment
C) control
D) intervention
Question
During an experiment that uses a baseline design, behavior during a baseline phase:

A) shows the effects of an independent variable.
B) provides an assessment of behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment.
C) is normally too erratic to be of any use and is not usually included in the analysis of data.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
In the simplest case, a baseline design involves exposing a subject to a(n) _____ phase to assess the subject's behavior during the application of an experimental treatment.

A) baseline
B) experimental
C) treatment
D) intervention
Question
In a baseline design, the phase of an experiment during which a subject is exposed to an experimental treatment is called the _____ phase.

A) experimental
B) treatment
C) baseline
D) intervention
Question
Unlike group-based designs, a baseline design _____.

A) relies on averaging to deal with uncontrolled variability produced by extraneous variables
B) focuses on the behavior of a single subject both within and across experimental treatments
C) exposes a subject to an intervention phase to assess behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment
D) relies on intrasubject replication to establish the generality of the findings across subjects
Question
Which of the following is a characteristic of baseline designs?

A) They focus on the behavior of multiple subjects and rely on averaging to deal with uncontrolled variability.
B) Intersubject replication is used to establish the internal validity of findings.
C) A subject typically remains under a given experimental treatment until the baseline meets a stability criterion.
D) A subject is exposed to a baseline phase to assess behavior during the application of an experimental treatment.
Question
The group approach assumes that if experimental controls fail to reduce uncontrolled variation, then _____ should be used to control it.

A) intrasubject replication
B) intersubject replication
C) statistical methods
D) complete ignorance
Question
In single-subject designs, uncontrolled variability produced by extraneous variables is handled:

A) by averaging across subjects within groups.
B) statistically after an experiment is over.
C) by ignoring it.
D) by tight experimental control.
Question
Waiting for your subject's behavior to "settle down" before going to the next phase of an experiment exemplifies a:

A) baseline.
B) discrete trials criterion.
C) stability criterion.
D) drifting baseline.
Question
In a baseline design, a subject typically remains under a given experimental treatment until a behavioral baseline meets a stability criterion, which _____.

A) imposes an objective rule for deciding that the baseline has stabilized
B) statistically adjusts scores from deviant subjects
C) eliminates deviant subjects from your experiment
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
In the context of baseline designs, which of the following statements is true about intrasubject replication?

A) It allows to establish the reliability of the collected observations within each phase.
B) It purports to establish the external validity of the findings made during a study.
C) It imposes an objective rule for deciding whether a behavioral baseline has stabilized.
D) It assesses whether changes in the baseline level produced by an intervention are reversible.
Question
In a single-subject baseline design, multiple subjects are included in an experiment so that:

A) data can be averaged before the analysis.
B) intrasubject replication can be done.
C) generality of the findings across subjects can be established.
D) power can be increased.
Question
Intersubject replication helps establish the _____ of data in a single-subject baseline design.

A) usefulness
B) generality
C) statistical reliability
D) power
Question
Which of the following terms refers to extensions that incorporate aspects of the original experiment while changing others?

A) Intrasubject replication
B) Intersubject replication
C) Systematic replication
D) Direct replication
Question
You conduct a single-subject experiment to see whether you can reduce disruptive behavior in a third-grader, Jonathon, by ignoring instances when he talks out of turn. You first observe his behavior under normal conditions, and then after his teacher has been instructed to ignore him when he talks out of turn. You find that his talking out of turn is reduced when it is ignored. In this scenario, _____.

A) you can safely conclude that your treatment was the only variable that affected Jonathon's urge to talk out of turn
B) you can conclude that the effect of your treatment is only temporary
C) you cannot safely conclude that your treatment changed his behavior because your treatment is confounded with time
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
A _____ is designed to assess whether any changes in a baseline level produced by an intervention are revocable.

A) baseline phase
B) stability criterion
C) reversal strategy
D) nested design
Question
In baseline designs, when a subject is exposed to each of the two phases twice, a baseline phase and an intervention phase, it yields a(n) _____ design.

A) ABAB
B) ABA
C) multiple-baseline
D) discrete trials
Question
The ABAB design provides a:

A) complete intersubject replication within an experiment.
B) complete intrasubject replication of an experiment.
C) partial intrasubject replication of an experiment.
D) partial intersubject replication within an experiment.
Question
Drifting baselines arise in cases in which:

A) there is a wide variation in baseline behavior within a baseline phase.
B) it may prove impossible to stabilize a baseline against slow, systematic changes.
C) there is a failure to achieve intersubject replication.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Question
_____ is a potentially serious problem that arises if baseline levels of performance cannot be revoked during reversal.

A) An unrecoverable baseline
B) Unsystematic within-phase baseline variability
C) A drifting baseline
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
Partially recoverable baselines pose few problems for analysis as long as:

A) the drift evident in the baseline is systematic and is in an upward direction.
B) the drift evident in the baseline is systematic and is in a downward direction.
C) a clear, replicable change remains in the levels of performance across treatments.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Question
When the baselines of different subjects in an experiment level off at very different values even though the conditions imposed on the subjects are nominally identical, you have the problem of:

A) unsystematic between-subjects baselines.
B) unequal baselines between subjects.
C) between-subjects baseline drifts.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
In the context of problem baselines, even if all subjects show similar baseline levels during a baseline phase, the particular levels obtained may not be useful for evaluating the effect of subsequent manipulations. This gives rise to the problem of _____.

A) inappropriate baseline levels
B) drifting baselines
C) unrecoverable baselines
D) unequal baselines between subjects
Question
In the context of the types of single-subject baseline design, which of the following is a characteristic of AB designs, where A refers to the baseline phase and B refers to the intervention phase of an experiment?

A) They present only a single administration of each condition and thus lack intrasubject replication.
B) They include a reversal phase in which baseline conditions are reestablished after exposure to a treatment.
C) They are appropriate only if it is desirable to return a subject to pre experimental conditions prior to the termination of a study.
D) They are designed to assess whether any changes in the baseline level produced by an intervention are reversible.
Question
Using multiple levels of an independent variable in single-subject designs presents certain problems because:

A) there are no statistical tests that can be applied to the resulting data.
B) subjects may get tired too quickly to allow for complete replication.
C) only one or a few subjects are tested, and completely counterbalancing the order of treatments across subjects is not usually possible.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Question
When treatments cause irreversible changes in behavior, _____ designs can be used.

A) AB-AC-AB
B) ABABA
C) reverse-baseline
D) multiple-baseline
Question
The multiple-baseline design uses an untreated behavior as a:

A) partial control for time-correlated changes that may confound the effect of an independent variable.
B) way to achieve intrasubject replication.
C) statistical control for treated behavior.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
In the changing criterion design, one begins with _____.

A) controlling the extraneous variables that introduce unwanted variability in the dependent variables
B) a baseline phase to assess the current level of a target behavior
C) adjusting the target criterion to move a small step toward the ultimate goal
D) an intervention phase to set an initial target criterion for a target behavior
Question
If you focus on how behavior changes immediately following a change in the level of an independent variable, you are studying:

A) steady-state behavior.
B) statistical noise.
C) behavioral dynamics.
D) behavioral statistics.
Question
_____ designs employ a continuously varying independent variable.

A) Baseline
B) Dynamic
C) Discrete trial
D) Multiple-baseline
Question
In the _____ design, individual subjects receive each treatment condition of an experiment dozens of times.

A) baseline
B) reversal
C) multiple-baseline
D) discrete trials
Question
Unlike the baseline design, the discrete trials design:

A) relies more heavily on inferential statistics to establish.
B) does not produce a continuous within-treatment baseline that can be adjusted and fine-tuned.
C) places less emphasis on rigid control over variables.
D) requires more number of subjects.
Question
Those who advocate applying inferential statistics to data from single-subject designs:

A) believe that statistics should replace replication to establish reliability.
B) believe that statistics should be used only when intersubject replication is not possible.
C) would not want to use statistics as a substitute for control over variables and replication.
D) believe that control over variables should be replaced by statistical control.
Question
Some researchers argue that the desired level of control is difficult to achieve and suggest:

A) giving up on doing the experiment.
B) using a baseline rather than a discrete trials design in such cases.
C) that inferential statistics may provide a solution in such cases.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
When the usual statistical procedures developed for group designs are to be applied to data from single-subject designs, the most straightforward approach is to use the:

A) between-subjects differences to estimate error variance.
B) multiple observations taken within a treatment to provide an estimate of uncontrolled error variance.
C) multiple observations taken between treatments to provide an estimate of uncontrolled error variance.
D) between-subjects differences to estimate error variance and the multiple observations taken within a treatment to provide an estimate of uncontrolled error variance.
Question
Using multiple observations taken within a treatment as an estimate of uncontrolled error variance is upset by:

A) drifting baselines.
B) unsystematic within-phase variability.
C) low intrasubject replication.
D) serial dependency.
Question
The main advantage of the single-subject approach is:

A) its effective control of subject variables such as personality and intelligence.
B) its ability to increase external validity by increasing internal validity.
C) its focus on controlling error variance.
D) its ability to prevent potential carryover effects from confounding the effects of independent variables.
Question
Which of the following statements is true about the single-subject approach?

A) Causal relationships can be established by using even just one subject.
B) Tight experimental control of extraneous variables increases external validity.
C) Multiple subjects' behaviors are followed over a relatively large number of observations.
D) Subject variables such as personality and intelligence can be easily controlled.
Question
Adjustment and fine-tuning of baselines over time:

A) is a serious source of confounding in single-subject designs.
B) provides an extended opportunity to identify previously unsuspected important variables.
C) gives you a mechanism to identify potential sources of confounding.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Question
A problem with the single-subject approach is that it:

A) is inappropriate for many research applications.
B) is highly vulnerable to the influence of extraneous variables.
C) lacks internal validity.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Question
In contrast to baseline designs, a group-based design focuses on the behavior of a single subject both within and across experimental treatments.
Question
In baseline designs, an intervention phase is used to assess a subject's behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment.
Question
In the group approach, uncontrolled variability of the baseline within each phase that is produced by extraneous variables is handled by tight experimental control.
Question
A stability criterion is used in a single-subject design to establish the generality of results.
Question
A single-subject researcher never pays attention to identify the possible sources of variability.
Question
When using baseline designs during an experiment, the only way to determine whether baselines have met a stability criterion is to update a baseline plot after each session and then examine it.
Question
The single-subject baseline design relies on intrasubject replication to establish the reliability of the observations collected within each phase.
Question
In single-subject designs, tight experimental control of extraneous variables increases internal validity.
Question
In the single-subject baseline design, intrasubject replication is used to establish the generality of the findings across subjects.
Question
A direct replication of a study replicates the original study exactly.
Question
In baseline designs, when one moves from baseline to intervention and then back to baseline, this return to a previous phase is termed a reversal strategy.
Question
Partially recoverable baselines frequently occur when learning develops during a treatment condition.
Question
Multiple-baseline designs are used to deal with irreversible changes in behavior in single-subject baseline designs.
Question
In a changing criterion design, it is never necessary to reduce the set criterion once a subject has achieved it.
Question
In dynamic designs, behavior immediately following the change in level can be observed to determine what has been called behavioral dynamics.
Question
Dynamic designs provide the discrete values of an independent variable that serve to distinguish the baseline and intervention phases of baseline designs.
Question
Both the baseline and the discrete trials designs focus on group behavior rather than the behavior of an individual participant.
Question
Those who advocate applying inferential statistics to data from single-subject designs use them as a substitute for control over variables and replication.
Question
It is a cardinal sin to apply inferential statistics to data from single-subject designs.
Question
A disadvantage of single-subject designs is that the design is inappropriate for many research applications.
Question
In the single-subject approach, an intensive investigation of the behavior of a single subject is advantageous because the long observational period often reveals nuances of behavior that might be missed in a short-term design.
Question
Discuss the history of single-subject designs.
Question
List the characteristics of the single-subject baseline design. Identify its key features, and explain how these features are used in research.
Question
Compare and contrast the group approach and the single-subject approach.
Question
Design an ABAB experiment to show the effect of a treatment (for example, reinforcement or punishment) on behavior. Clearly label each phase, and indicate why each phase is included. Also, show a graph of the expected results if your treatment were effective.
Question
List the problems researchers are most likely to deal with in baseline designs in addition to excessive uncontrolled variability. Describe their causes and ways to handle them.
Question
Design a multiple-baseline experiment on reducing bad habits. Clearly label each phase, and indicate why each phase is included. Also, show a graph of the expected results if your treatment were effective.
Question
In a changing criterion design, is it ever necessary to reduce an initially set criterion once it has been achieved by a subject? Explain.
Question
What is behavioral dynamics? How does it differ from an approach that looks only at steady-state behavior?
Question
Give an example of a dynamic design.
Question
Compare and contrast the discrete trials and the baseline designs.
Question
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of using single-subject designs.
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Deck 12: Using Single-Subject Designs
1
The pioneering experimentalists:

A) avoided the single-subject approach because it was not rigorous enough.
B) controlled error variance by averaging subjects within groups.
C) managed to identify important psychological phenomena.
D) None of the answers is correct.
managed to identify important psychological phenomena.
2
Despite intersubject variability, the within-subjects approach worked because:

A) a large number of observations were collected from a single subject.
B) incidental factors that might contribute unwanted variability were rigidly controlled.
C) the investigators focused their attentions on powerful variables.
D) All of the answers are correct.
All of the answers are correct.
3
_____ was pioneered by Sir Frances Galton.

A) The single-subject approach
B) The application of statistical techniques to the study of individual differences
C) Early psychophysical research
D) Laboratory research
The application of statistical techniques to the study of individual differences
4
With the advent of the group approach, the single-subject approach:

A) waned in popularity.
B) became more popular.
C) continued to remain as popular.
D) died for a couple of years.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
B. F. Skinner and his followers established their own journal, the _____, because they were unwilling to use inferential statistics to establish the reliability of their findings, making it increasingly difficult to get their results published.

A) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
B) Journal of Experimental Psychology
C) Journal of the Psychonomic Society
D) Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The _____ design was developed primarily by B. F. Skinner and his followers.

A) discrete trials
B) baseline
C) interrupted-trials
D) averaged-baseline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
In the simplest case, a baseline design involves exposing a subject to a(n) _____ phase to assess the subject's behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment.

A) baseline
B) treatment
C) control
D) intervention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
During an experiment that uses a baseline design, behavior during a baseline phase:

A) shows the effects of an independent variable.
B) provides an assessment of behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment.
C) is normally too erratic to be of any use and is not usually included in the analysis of data.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In the simplest case, a baseline design involves exposing a subject to a(n) _____ phase to assess the subject's behavior during the application of an experimental treatment.

A) baseline
B) experimental
C) treatment
D) intervention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In a baseline design, the phase of an experiment during which a subject is exposed to an experimental treatment is called the _____ phase.

A) experimental
B) treatment
C) baseline
D) intervention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Unlike group-based designs, a baseline design _____.

A) relies on averaging to deal with uncontrolled variability produced by extraneous variables
B) focuses on the behavior of a single subject both within and across experimental treatments
C) exposes a subject to an intervention phase to assess behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment
D) relies on intrasubject replication to establish the generality of the findings across subjects
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following is a characteristic of baseline designs?

A) They focus on the behavior of multiple subjects and rely on averaging to deal with uncontrolled variability.
B) Intersubject replication is used to establish the internal validity of findings.
C) A subject typically remains under a given experimental treatment until the baseline meets a stability criterion.
D) A subject is exposed to a baseline phase to assess behavior during the application of an experimental treatment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The group approach assumes that if experimental controls fail to reduce uncontrolled variation, then _____ should be used to control it.

A) intrasubject replication
B) intersubject replication
C) statistical methods
D) complete ignorance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In single-subject designs, uncontrolled variability produced by extraneous variables is handled:

A) by averaging across subjects within groups.
B) statistically after an experiment is over.
C) by ignoring it.
D) by tight experimental control.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Waiting for your subject's behavior to "settle down" before going to the next phase of an experiment exemplifies a:

A) baseline.
B) discrete trials criterion.
C) stability criterion.
D) drifting baseline.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In a baseline design, a subject typically remains under a given experimental treatment until a behavioral baseline meets a stability criterion, which _____.

A) imposes an objective rule for deciding that the baseline has stabilized
B) statistically adjusts scores from deviant subjects
C) eliminates deviant subjects from your experiment
D) None of the answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In the context of baseline designs, which of the following statements is true about intrasubject replication?

A) It allows to establish the reliability of the collected observations within each phase.
B) It purports to establish the external validity of the findings made during a study.
C) It imposes an objective rule for deciding whether a behavioral baseline has stabilized.
D) It assesses whether changes in the baseline level produced by an intervention are reversible.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
In a single-subject baseline design, multiple subjects are included in an experiment so that:

A) data can be averaged before the analysis.
B) intrasubject replication can be done.
C) generality of the findings across subjects can be established.
D) power can be increased.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Intersubject replication helps establish the _____ of data in a single-subject baseline design.

A) usefulness
B) generality
C) statistical reliability
D) power
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which of the following terms refers to extensions that incorporate aspects of the original experiment while changing others?

A) Intrasubject replication
B) Intersubject replication
C) Systematic replication
D) Direct replication
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
You conduct a single-subject experiment to see whether you can reduce disruptive behavior in a third-grader, Jonathon, by ignoring instances when he talks out of turn. You first observe his behavior under normal conditions, and then after his teacher has been instructed to ignore him when he talks out of turn. You find that his talking out of turn is reduced when it is ignored. In this scenario, _____.

A) you can safely conclude that your treatment was the only variable that affected Jonathon's urge to talk out of turn
B) you can conclude that the effect of your treatment is only temporary
C) you cannot safely conclude that your treatment changed his behavior because your treatment is confounded with time
D) None of the answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
A _____ is designed to assess whether any changes in a baseline level produced by an intervention are revocable.

A) baseline phase
B) stability criterion
C) reversal strategy
D) nested design
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In baseline designs, when a subject is exposed to each of the two phases twice, a baseline phase and an intervention phase, it yields a(n) _____ design.

A) ABAB
B) ABA
C) multiple-baseline
D) discrete trials
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The ABAB design provides a:

A) complete intersubject replication within an experiment.
B) complete intrasubject replication of an experiment.
C) partial intrasubject replication of an experiment.
D) partial intersubject replication within an experiment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Drifting baselines arise in cases in which:

A) there is a wide variation in baseline behavior within a baseline phase.
B) it may prove impossible to stabilize a baseline against slow, systematic changes.
C) there is a failure to achieve intersubject replication.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
_____ is a potentially serious problem that arises if baseline levels of performance cannot be revoked during reversal.

A) An unrecoverable baseline
B) Unsystematic within-phase baseline variability
C) A drifting baseline
D) None of the answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Partially recoverable baselines pose few problems for analysis as long as:

A) the drift evident in the baseline is systematic and is in an upward direction.
B) the drift evident in the baseline is systematic and is in a downward direction.
C) a clear, replicable change remains in the levels of performance across treatments.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
When the baselines of different subjects in an experiment level off at very different values even though the conditions imposed on the subjects are nominally identical, you have the problem of:

A) unsystematic between-subjects baselines.
B) unequal baselines between subjects.
C) between-subjects baseline drifts.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In the context of problem baselines, even if all subjects show similar baseline levels during a baseline phase, the particular levels obtained may not be useful for evaluating the effect of subsequent manipulations. This gives rise to the problem of _____.

A) inappropriate baseline levels
B) drifting baselines
C) unrecoverable baselines
D) unequal baselines between subjects
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
In the context of the types of single-subject baseline design, which of the following is a characteristic of AB designs, where A refers to the baseline phase and B refers to the intervention phase of an experiment?

A) They present only a single administration of each condition and thus lack intrasubject replication.
B) They include a reversal phase in which baseline conditions are reestablished after exposure to a treatment.
C) They are appropriate only if it is desirable to return a subject to pre experimental conditions prior to the termination of a study.
D) They are designed to assess whether any changes in the baseline level produced by an intervention are reversible.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Using multiple levels of an independent variable in single-subject designs presents certain problems because:

A) there are no statistical tests that can be applied to the resulting data.
B) subjects may get tired too quickly to allow for complete replication.
C) only one or a few subjects are tested, and completely counterbalancing the order of treatments across subjects is not usually possible.
D) All of the answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
When treatments cause irreversible changes in behavior, _____ designs can be used.

A) AB-AC-AB
B) ABABA
C) reverse-baseline
D) multiple-baseline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The multiple-baseline design uses an untreated behavior as a:

A) partial control for time-correlated changes that may confound the effect of an independent variable.
B) way to achieve intrasubject replication.
C) statistical control for treated behavior.
D) None of the answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
In the changing criterion design, one begins with _____.

A) controlling the extraneous variables that introduce unwanted variability in the dependent variables
B) a baseline phase to assess the current level of a target behavior
C) adjusting the target criterion to move a small step toward the ultimate goal
D) an intervention phase to set an initial target criterion for a target behavior
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
If you focus on how behavior changes immediately following a change in the level of an independent variable, you are studying:

A) steady-state behavior.
B) statistical noise.
C) behavioral dynamics.
D) behavioral statistics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
_____ designs employ a continuously varying independent variable.

A) Baseline
B) Dynamic
C) Discrete trial
D) Multiple-baseline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
In the _____ design, individual subjects receive each treatment condition of an experiment dozens of times.

A) baseline
B) reversal
C) multiple-baseline
D) discrete trials
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Unlike the baseline design, the discrete trials design:

A) relies more heavily on inferential statistics to establish.
B) does not produce a continuous within-treatment baseline that can be adjusted and fine-tuned.
C) places less emphasis on rigid control over variables.
D) requires more number of subjects.
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39
Those who advocate applying inferential statistics to data from single-subject designs:

A) believe that statistics should replace replication to establish reliability.
B) believe that statistics should be used only when intersubject replication is not possible.
C) would not want to use statistics as a substitute for control over variables and replication.
D) believe that control over variables should be replaced by statistical control.
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40
Some researchers argue that the desired level of control is difficult to achieve and suggest:

A) giving up on doing the experiment.
B) using a baseline rather than a discrete trials design in such cases.
C) that inferential statistics may provide a solution in such cases.
D) None of the answers is correct.
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41
When the usual statistical procedures developed for group designs are to be applied to data from single-subject designs, the most straightforward approach is to use the:

A) between-subjects differences to estimate error variance.
B) multiple observations taken within a treatment to provide an estimate of uncontrolled error variance.
C) multiple observations taken between treatments to provide an estimate of uncontrolled error variance.
D) between-subjects differences to estimate error variance and the multiple observations taken within a treatment to provide an estimate of uncontrolled error variance.
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42
Using multiple observations taken within a treatment as an estimate of uncontrolled error variance is upset by:

A) drifting baselines.
B) unsystematic within-phase variability.
C) low intrasubject replication.
D) serial dependency.
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43
The main advantage of the single-subject approach is:

A) its effective control of subject variables such as personality and intelligence.
B) its ability to increase external validity by increasing internal validity.
C) its focus on controlling error variance.
D) its ability to prevent potential carryover effects from confounding the effects of independent variables.
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44
Which of the following statements is true about the single-subject approach?

A) Causal relationships can be established by using even just one subject.
B) Tight experimental control of extraneous variables increases external validity.
C) Multiple subjects' behaviors are followed over a relatively large number of observations.
D) Subject variables such as personality and intelligence can be easily controlled.
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45
Adjustment and fine-tuning of baselines over time:

A) is a serious source of confounding in single-subject designs.
B) provides an extended opportunity to identify previously unsuspected important variables.
C) gives you a mechanism to identify potential sources of confounding.
D) None of the answers is correct.
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46
A problem with the single-subject approach is that it:

A) is inappropriate for many research applications.
B) is highly vulnerable to the influence of extraneous variables.
C) lacks internal validity.
D) All of the answers are correct.
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47
In contrast to baseline designs, a group-based design focuses on the behavior of a single subject both within and across experimental treatments.
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48
In baseline designs, an intervention phase is used to assess a subject's behavior in the absence of an experimental treatment.
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49
In the group approach, uncontrolled variability of the baseline within each phase that is produced by extraneous variables is handled by tight experimental control.
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50
A stability criterion is used in a single-subject design to establish the generality of results.
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51
A single-subject researcher never pays attention to identify the possible sources of variability.
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52
When using baseline designs during an experiment, the only way to determine whether baselines have met a stability criterion is to update a baseline plot after each session and then examine it.
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53
The single-subject baseline design relies on intrasubject replication to establish the reliability of the observations collected within each phase.
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54
In single-subject designs, tight experimental control of extraneous variables increases internal validity.
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55
In the single-subject baseline design, intrasubject replication is used to establish the generality of the findings across subjects.
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56
A direct replication of a study replicates the original study exactly.
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57
In baseline designs, when one moves from baseline to intervention and then back to baseline, this return to a previous phase is termed a reversal strategy.
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58
Partially recoverable baselines frequently occur when learning develops during a treatment condition.
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59
Multiple-baseline designs are used to deal with irreversible changes in behavior in single-subject baseline designs.
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60
In a changing criterion design, it is never necessary to reduce the set criterion once a subject has achieved it.
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61
In dynamic designs, behavior immediately following the change in level can be observed to determine what has been called behavioral dynamics.
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62
Dynamic designs provide the discrete values of an independent variable that serve to distinguish the baseline and intervention phases of baseline designs.
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63
Both the baseline and the discrete trials designs focus on group behavior rather than the behavior of an individual participant.
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64
Those who advocate applying inferential statistics to data from single-subject designs use them as a substitute for control over variables and replication.
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65
It is a cardinal sin to apply inferential statistics to data from single-subject designs.
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66
A disadvantage of single-subject designs is that the design is inappropriate for many research applications.
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67
In the single-subject approach, an intensive investigation of the behavior of a single subject is advantageous because the long observational period often reveals nuances of behavior that might be missed in a short-term design.
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68
Discuss the history of single-subject designs.
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69
List the characteristics of the single-subject baseline design. Identify its key features, and explain how these features are used in research.
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70
Compare and contrast the group approach and the single-subject approach.
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71
Design an ABAB experiment to show the effect of a treatment (for example, reinforcement or punishment) on behavior. Clearly label each phase, and indicate why each phase is included. Also, show a graph of the expected results if your treatment were effective.
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72
List the problems researchers are most likely to deal with in baseline designs in addition to excessive uncontrolled variability. Describe their causes and ways to handle them.
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73
Design a multiple-baseline experiment on reducing bad habits. Clearly label each phase, and indicate why each phase is included. Also, show a graph of the expected results if your treatment were effective.
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74
In a changing criterion design, is it ever necessary to reduce an initially set criterion once it has been achieved by a subject? Explain.
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75
What is behavioral dynamics? How does it differ from an approach that looks only at steady-state behavior?
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76
Give an example of a dynamic design.
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77
Compare and contrast the discrete trials and the baseline designs.
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78
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of using single-subject designs.
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