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Visual Analysis of Single-Case Data×Celeration Line Analysis×
DomaineSocial WorkSocial Work
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20101972
Auteur d'origineApplied behavior analysis tradition; codified by Kratochwill et al. (What Works Clearinghouse)Owen R. White & the precision-teaching tradition; codified for social work by Bloom, Fischer & Orme
TypeStructured graphical judgment of intervention effect in single-case time-series dataTrend-line procedure for projecting baseline trend into the intervention phase
Source fondatriceKratochwill, T. R., Hitchcock, J., Horner, R. H., Levin, J. R., Odom, S. L., Rindskopf, D. M., & Shadish, W. R. (2010). Single-Case Designs Technical Documentation. What Works Clearinghouse, U.S. Department of Education. link ↗Kazdin, A. E. (2011). Single-Case Research Designs: Methods for Clinical and Applied Settings (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780195341881
AliasVisual Inspection of Single-Case Data, Single-Case Visual Analysis, Graphical Analysis of Single-Subject Data, Visual Analysis of Time-Series GraphsCeleration Line, Split-Middle Method, Trend Line Analysis (Single-Case), Celeration Approach
Apparentées44
RésuméVisual analysis is the primary method for judging whether an intervention produced an effect in single-case and single-system designs: the data are plotted as a time series across baseline and intervention phases and read systematically for changes in level, trend, variability, immediacy of effect, overlap between phases, and consistency across similar phases. Rooted in applied behavior analysis and codified by the What Works Clearinghouse single-case standards, it treats the graph itself as the evidence and reserves the label 'effect' for changes that are clear, replicated within the design, and unlikely to reflect ordinary fluctuation.Celeration line analysis is a single-case method that fits a trend line to the baseline phase, projects that line forward into the intervention phase, and judges effect by how many intervention data points fall on the improvement side of the projected trend. Built on Owen White's split-middle technique from precision teaching and codified for social-work practice by Bloom, Fischer, and Orme, it directly addresses a weakness of level-only comparisons: it asks whether the client improved beyond the trajectory the baseline was already on, and pairs the count with a simple binomial test for statistical decision-making.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Visual Analysis of Single-Case Data · Celeration Line Analysis. Consulté le 2026-06-25 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare