This phase in single-subject designs establishes the benchmark for comparison
What is baseliine phase?
This statistic shows how big the treatment effect is, not just whether it exists
What is an effect size?
The CATE form is used to evaluate the strength and quality of this type of evidence
What is treatment?
This type of review uses a structured, replicable process to summarize all evidence on a research question
What is a systematic review?
This property describes whether a test measures what it claims to measure
What is validity?
Name one defining feature of a single subject research design.
These are ranges of plausible values for an effect size and indicate precision
What are confidence intervals?
Name the three items that display true experiments.
1. randomization, 2. manipulation of variables, and 3. control group/variables
This quantitative technique combines effect sizes across studies to provide an overall estimate
What is a meta-analysis?
This form of reliability measures how consistent scores are when the same test is given twice
What is test-retest reliability?
This qualitative tradition studies cultures or groups in their natural environments with extended observations
What is ethnography?
What is Cohen's d?
interpretation: 0.2=small, 0.5=medium, and 0.8=large
This is the amount of points in a CATE.
What is 15?
This graphic displays individual study results and a pooled estimate, using squares and diamonds
What is a forest plot?
This diagnostic metric measures how well a test correctly identifies individuals with a disorder
What is sensitivity?
This term describes the average rate of behavior during a phase in single-subject designs
What is level?
This is what an effect size tells a researcher/reader.
What is how large the difference is (not just if there is a difference)?
This is the amount of tools listed to detect pseudoscience.
What is 5?
This term refers to variability among studies in a meta-analysis
What is heterogeneity?
Name the four types of validity.
What are criterion, content, construct, and face validity?
criterion- quantitative, content- test items, construct- big picture, and face- looks like
This qualitative approach captures the “essence” of lived experiences using concepts like intentionality and bracketing
What is phenomenology?
A narrow CI represents this.
What is more precision, showing how true the magnitude is?
This tool describes confirmation bias. We need to remember to look at all evidence and not just some that fits the agenda.
What is "Don't ignore the Misses and Count only the Hits"?
List the seven steps of developing a systematic review.
1. define research question, 2. develop search protocol, 3. conduct a comprehensive search, 4. screen studies for eligibility, 5. extract data, 6. assess study quality, and 7. synthesize findings
Describe the formula used to find specificity.
Specificity= true negatives/true negatives+false positives