What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

In this weeks blog I will be looking at how single case design and case studies are different as people often perceive them as being identical to one another. There are indeed similarities between these two experimental designs which is what often makes people think that they are the same. But they aren’t as similar as you think:

 Single Subject Design: Like a case study, this design focuses on a single individual and so cannot be generalised to the public, limiting its external validity. However, unlike a case study, single subject design helps to investigate an intervention to observe its effects on a baseline behaviour. This is usually shown on an A-B design graph where a baseline and intervention are plotted and can then be visually compared, which was used to look at the effects of the SAFMEDS cards we were given in research skills. From using this, a clinical significance can be observed where the differences between the baseline and intervention are meaningful. The disadvantages to this design however is that there is no control group to compare against, meaning that it is unclear as to just how much the intervention impacted on the baseline or if it did this at all.

Case Studies: These studies focus on observations of events or situations that have already occurred or are currently occurring in an individuals life. There are two different methods that can be taken which includes either a prospective method, where an individual or group is observed to see the effects or outcomes that occur. An example includes the Tuskegee study (link included in the references) where the progression of syphilis was observed in group that was treated and a control group that werent given any treatment, although this was a very controversial study. The other method is labelled the retrospective method, where information from past events and situations are looked at through scanning historical records or collecting an individuals account of what occurred, a famous example is that of Phineas Gage, who was involved in an accident that damaged his brain and consequently changed his behaviour. Due to all these reasons, case studies can examine participants from hard to find populations/conditions.

In conclusion, the differences between these two approaches show that single subject design is quasi experimental and should be used if there is an intervention of which you are interested to introduce and observe whereas a case study is not experimental and a more descriptive style of research that should be used when a event or situation has impacted a participant that you wish to gain more information on and discover what it was that caused the outcome that was observed.

References:

Tuskegee Study – http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/pdf/10.2105/AJPH.81.11.1498

Phineas Gage  – http://online.liebertpub.com/doi/abs/10.1089/089771504774129964?2

Single subject research (also known as single case experiments) is popular in the fields of special education and counseling. This research design is useful when the researcher is attempting to change the behavior of an individual or a small group of individuals and wishes to document that change. Unlike true experiments where the researcher randomly assigns participants to a control and treatment group, in single subject research the participant serves as both the control and treatment group. The researcher uses line graphs to show the effects of a particular intervention or treatment.  An important factor of single subject research is that only one variable is changed at a time. Single subject research designs are “weak when it comes to external validity….Studies involving single-subject designs that show a particular treatment to be effective in changing behavior must rely on replication–across individuals rather than groups–if such results are be found worthy of generalization” (Fraenkel & Wallen, 2006, p. 318).

Suppose a researcher wished to investigate the effect of praise on reducing disruptive behavior over many days. First she would need to establish a baseline of how frequently the disruptions occurred. She would measure how many disruptions occurred each day for several days. In the example below, the target student was disruptive seven times on the first day, six times on the second day, and seven times on the third day. Note how the sequence of time is depicted on the x-axis (horizontal axis) and the dependent variable (outcome variable) is depicted on the y-axis (vertical axis).

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

Once a baseline of behavior has been established (when a consistent pattern emerges with at least three data points), the intervention begins. The researcher continues to plot the frequency of behavior while implementing the intervention of praise.

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

In this example, we can see that the frequency of disruptions decreased once praise began. The design in this example is known as an A-B design. The baseline period is referred to as A and the intervention period is identified as B.

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

Another design is the A-B-A design. An A-B-A design (also known as a reversal design) involves discontinuing the intervention and returning to a nontreatment condition.

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

Sometimes an individual’s behavior is so severe that the researcher cannot wait to establish a baseline and must begin with an intervention. In this case, a B-A-B design is used. The intervention is implemented immediately (before establishing a baseline). This is followed by a measurement without the intervention and then a repeat of the intervention.

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

Multiple-Baseline Design

Sometimes, a researcher may be interested in addressing several issues for one student or a single issue for several students. In this case, a multiple-baseline design is used.

“In a multiple baseline across subjects design, the researcher introduces the intervention to different persons at different times. The significance of this is that if a behavior changes only after the intervention is presented, and this behavior change is seen successively in each subject’s data, the effects can more likely be credited to the intervention itself as opposed to other variables. Multiple-baseline designs do not require the intervention to be withdrawn. Instead, each subject’s own data are compared between intervention and nonintervention behaviors, resulting in each subject acting as his or her own control (Kazdin, 1982). An added benefit of this design, and all single-case designs, is the immediacy of the data. Instead of waiting until postintervention to take measures on the behavior, single-case research prescribes continuous data collection and visual monitoring of that data displayed graphically, allowing for immediate instructional decision-making. Students, therefore, do not linger in an intervention that is not working for them, making the graphic display of single-case research combined with differentiated instruction responsive to the needs of students.” (Geisler, Hessler, Gardner, & Lovelace, 2009)

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

Regardless of the research design, the line graphs used to illustrate the data contain a set of common elements.

What is the main difference between single subject research and case study research?

Generally, in single subject research we count the number of times something occurs in a given time period and see if it occurs more or less often in that time period after implementing an intervention. For example, we might measure how many baskets someone makes while shooting for 2 minutes. We would repeat that at least three times to get our baseline. Next, we would test some intervention. We might play music while shooting, give encouragement while shooting, or video the person while shooting to see if our intervention influenced the number of shots made. After the 3 baseline measurements (3 sets of 2 minute shooting), we would measure several more times (sets of 2 minute shooting) after the intervention and plot the time points (number of baskets made in 2 minutes for each of the measured time points). This works well for behaviors that are distinct and can be counted.

Sometimes behaviors come and go over time (such as being off task in a classroom or not listening during a coaching session). The way we can record these is to select a period of time (say 5 minutes) and mark down every 10 seconds whether our participant is on task. We make a minimum of three sets of 5 minute observations for a baseline, implement an intervention, and then make more sets of 5 minute observations with the intervention in place. We use this method rather than counting how many times someone is off task because one could continually be off task and that would only be a count of 1 since the person was continually off task. Someone who might be off task twice for 15 second would be off task twice for a score of 2. However, the second person is certainly not off task twice as much as the first person. Therefore, recording whether the person is off task at 10-second intervals gives a more accurate picture. The person continually off task would have a score of 30 (off task at every second interval for 5 minutes) and the person off task twice for a short time would have a score of 2 (off task only during 2 of the 10 second interval measures.

I hope this helps you better understand single subject research.

I have created a PowerPoint on Single Subject Research, which also available below as a video.

https://researchbasics.education.uconn.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/1215/2021/01/SingleSubjectwVoiceOver.mp4

I have also created instructions for creating single-subject research design graphs with Excel.

References

Fraenkel, J. R., & Wallen, N. E. (2006). How to design and evaluate research in education (6th ed.). Boston, MA: McGraw Hill.

Geisler, J. L., Hessler, T., Gardner, R., III, & Lovelace, T. S. (2009). Differentiated writing interventions for high-achieving urban African American elementary students. Journal of Advanced Academics, 20, 214–247.

Del Siegle, Ph.D.
University of Connecticut

www.delsiegle.info

Revised 02/28/2015

What is a single subject case study?

Single-subject research is a type of quantitative research that involves studying in detail the behaviour of each of a small number of participants. Note that the term single-subject does not mean that only one participant is studied; it is more typical for there to be somewhere between two and 10 participants.

Are Case Studies a part of single

There are controls that need to be implemented, and a case study does not equate to a single-subject experimental design. People misunderstand or they misinterpret the term “multiple baseline” to mean that because you are measuring multiple things, that that gives you the experimental control.

What is the difference between single subject design and group research design?

Unlike group designs, single-case research designs do not involve aggregation of data across multiple participants for the purpose of creating group statistics.

What is single

Single subject research design is a type of research methodology characterized by repeated assessment of a particular phenomenon (often a behavior) over time and is generally used to evaluate interventions [2].