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What Works Regarding Social Skills Interventions Using Single Subject Design. Jeffrey Chenier, M.A., Aaron J. Fischer, Katherine Hunter, Emily Patty, Lisa Libster , M.A., Kristen O’Leary, Haley York, Natalie Robichaux and Frank Gresham, Ph.D. Introduction. Scientifically Based Research
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What Works Regarding Social Skills Interventions Using Single Subject Design Jeffrey Chenier, M.A., Aaron J. Fischer, Katherine Hunter, Emily Patty, Lisa Libster, M.A., Kristen O’Leary, Haley York, Natalie Robichaux and Frank Gresham, Ph.D.
Introduction • Scientifically Based Research • Section 9101(37) NCLB: Research that involves the application of rigorous, systematic, and objective procedures to obtain reliable and valid knowledge relevant to education activities and programs (No Child Left Behind Act, 2001)
Introduction • What Works Clearinghouse (2006): Group Design • Meet Evidence Standards: • “well designed and implemented randomized controlled trials” • Meet Evidence Standards with reservations: • “quasi-experiments with equating and no severe design or implementation problems or randomized clinical trials with severe design or implementation problems”
Introduction • What Works Clearinghouse (2010): Single Case (SC) • Meet Evidence Standards • IV must be systematically manipulated, with the researcher determining when and how the IV conditions change • Each outcome variable must be measured systematically over time by more than one assessor, and the study needs to have IOA calculated 20% of the time in each condition, and IOA percentage must meet minimum thresholds • 0.80 IOA or 0.60 Cohen’s Kappa • Study must include at least three attempts to demonstrate an intervention effect at three different points in time or with three different phase repetitions • Phase must have a minimum of three data points • Effect size estimation follows if a study has either Strong Evidence or Moderate Evidence
Introduction • Meta-Analysis • Strube & Hartmann (1982) • Objective method for summarizing a body of empirical findings • Emphasizes the direction and magnitude of effects across studies for a particular intervention
What Works Clearinghouse (2010) • No agreed upon method or gold standard to calculate effect sizes from single-case design research • Problems • How to quantify the effect? • How accurate is the effect? • How comparable are the effects across other SC designs? • How comparable are the effects compared to group design effect sizes?
Current Effect Size Estimators (WWC, 2010) • Nonparametric Methods • Percentage of Nonoverlapping Data (PND), Percentage of All Nonoverlapping Data (PAND), Percent Exceeding the Median (PEM) • “Distributional properties of these measures are unknown, so standard errors and statistical tests are not formally justified.” • Additionally, trend is not addressed • Because of the lack of statistical justification, only use if an approximate size of the effect is desired. • Wolery et al. (2010) compared four overlapping methods to visual inspection of effect and each method had its own host of issues, so much that they called for their abandonment • Visual analysis only agreed 121/160 on whether the treatment was effective or not
Current Effect Size Estimators (WWC, 2010) • Parametric Methods • Regression Estimates • Advantages • Familiarity • Ability to model trends • Ability to attain an Effect Size from a single case • Disadvantages • Inability to deal with complex structures present in single case design
Current Effect Size Estimators (WWC, 2010) • Parametric Methods • Multilevel Modeling • Advantages • Ability to account for complexity of design • Disadvantages • Unfamiliarity • Technically challenging and time consuming • Different metric from group design Effect Sizes, therefore the estimate is not comparable
Current Effect Size Estimators (WWC, 2010) • Quantitative Methods • Differing methods to calculate a Standardized Mean Difference statistic (current study) • Advantages • Encourages inclusion of SC designs in evaluating effects of interventions • Potentially gives another method in which to rank order interventions • Disadvantages • Not completely comparable to group design research • Pooled within-group variance not comparable to pooled within phase variance • Small n leads to imprecise estimates • Trend is not assessed
Summary of Effect Size Estimators for SC Design (WWC, 2010) • Simply put, science is not there yet • Nonparametric estimators should be reported with a parametric estimator (regression) • Multilevel methods are not ready • Quantitative methods are not as statistically sound as they should be, but the base from which to build is present
Social Skills • Learned behaviors that enable positive interactions and allow for escape/avoidance of negative interactions • Academic Enablers (DiPerna & Elliott, 2002) • Better predictor of academic achievement in 8th grade than 3rd grade academic achievement (Caprara et. al, 2000) • Myriad of problems co-occurring with social skills deficits • Both externalizing and internalizing
Introduction • Does social skills training work? • Gresham, Cook, Crews, and Kern, 2004
Introduction • Does social skills training work? • Godbold et. al, 2010 • 34 group design studies • Random Assignment with Equivalent Starting Groups • g=0.67, p<0.05 ; BESD treatment = 82% • Significantly higher than quasi-experimental designs
Introduction • Godbold et. al, 2010 • Contrast Analyses
Introduction • Research question • Evidence is there for Primary Programs; is there evidence for Secondary Programs?
Summary • 7 total studies • 6 with Autism Spectrum, 1 with Typically Developing • Multiple interventions available • Effectiveness • 3 very effective • 3 moderately effective • 1 not as effective (but still statistically significant)
Method • Literature Search, 2000-2009 • Keyword Search in PsycINFO • 5940 Articles Total
Method • Coding 1 Primary Inclusionary Criteria • No Books, Reviews, Meta-Analyses, Group Designs, Dissertations • Coding 1 Secondary Inclusionary Criteria • “Is study a social skills intervention or does it target a social skill?” (YES) • Does study focus on ages 3-21, or through high school? (YES) • Does study target drugs, alcohol, or sexual offenders? (NO) • 296 studies remained, 100% IOA in coding 1 (approximately 22% of articles)
Method • Coding 2 Primary Inclusionary Criteria • Is the full article in English? • Does article include single subject graphs? • No AB design • Coding 2 Secondary Inclusionary Criteria • Does study fit our Social Skills definition? • Gresham, Van, and Cook, 2006: • Facilitates initiating and maintain positive social relationships • Contributes to peer acceptance and friendship development • Results in satisfactory school adjustment • Allows individuals to cope with and adapt to the demands of the social environment • Is the study not part of a larger treatment package? • Coded 190 unique studies • 64 studies on to Coding 3 (IOA = 92% for 38% of studies)
Method • Coding 3 Primary Inclusion Criteria • If one participant, more than 1 replication across setting or behavior • Presence of variability in baseline and treatment conditions across at least 2 participants, settings, or behaviors • Graphs in which UnGraph was able to score • 40 studies eligible for analysis (IOA 100% on 30% of studies)
Method • Coding 3 • Design Type and Subtype • Research Question • Main Unit of Comparison • Participant Info • Phase Info • Dataset Info • Measurement Strategy • DV information • IOA • Treatment Efficacy • Study Quality • Three replications across or within? • Treatment Integrity? • IV Operationally Defined? • DV Operationally Defined? • IOA
Method • Data Extraction • UnGraph (Biosoft, 2004) • Extracts numerical data from graphs and puts it into Microsoft Excel • High reliability and validity in collecting data from single subject graphs (Shadish et al., 2009)
Method • Effect Size Calculation (Shadish, 2007) • G = (Mt– Mb) / sp • yields a standardized mean difference statistic • Currently the best quantitative method available, but not absolutely accurate
Method 1) Calculate Mean of Baseline and Tx Panels One, Two, and Three 3) Calculate Standard Deviation of BL and Tx from the Mean of Means 2) Calculate BL and Tx Mean of Means across the three panels 4) Calculate Effect Size for Positive Social Interactions
Results • Are social skills interventions evaluated by single subject methods effective? • Yes • g=3.06
Results • Independent Variable *p<.05
Results • Independent Variable • Largest effects occurred with interventions that target self-awareness / self-monitoring of behavior as the primary independent variable
Results • Dependent Variable *p<.05
Results • Dependent Variable • Larger effects are seen when targeting prosocial behavior over problem behavior
Results Recipient Director *p<.05 *p<.05
Results • Recipient and Director • Largest effects are seen when the student is the target of the intervention and when either an independent experimenter/interventionist or peer is the director of the intervention
Results • Disability *p<.05
Results • Disability* • Interventions are most effective with children who have disabilities along the Autism spectrum
Results • Setting
Results • Setting • The largest effects were seen when interventions were implemented in schools
Results • Number of Components
Results • Components** • Increasing the number of components in an intervention did not increase the magnitude of effect • Size may not matter, quality matters
Results • Treatment Integrity
Results • Treatment Integrity* • Studies that report percentage of integrity had largest effects
Results • Reinforcement
Results • Reinforcement** • No difference in these studies in regards to reinforcement • Could be a definitional issue. Coded articles that specified reinforcement given, not necessarily lack of reinforcement • Reinforcement should be provided if necessary to acquire behavior change • Quality of intervention may be more important for some
Results • Study Quality
Results • Study Quality* • Highest effects were found in studies that had highest quality ratings, although not statistically significant • Studies/interventions should be implemented with highest quality possible
Summary of Results • Mixture of Ivs, all having self awareness qualities • Matches effect of group design study • Opposite of effect of group design study • Not significantly higher, but higher, and similar to our group design finding
Limitations • Effect size estimator not entirely accurate • No correction for small sample size • Stringent selection criteria / data analytic method responsible for abandonment of nearly 40% of single subject studies • Both parametric and nonparametric methods would have had a larger n
Discussion and Future Directions • All interventions were effective • If assessment leads to a social skills deficit, with almost any kind of student, there are interventions that work • Single subject meta-analyses are not yet as informative/definitive as they could be, but current best practice is still to aggregate magnitude and direction of effects across studies • Calculate results using other available methods and comparing effects (NASP in Philly 2012????)