So, I'm starting in the fall at a clinical PhD program. I am scheduled to work with a specific adviser, although recently, I've been looking at published research by other faculty members in the department. One faculty member's work, which I am intrigued by, specializes in "practitioner-generated case-based" psychotherapy research (i.e., the researcher/therapist tracks the symptom status of one psychotherapy patient across baseline and intervention phases). I'm hoping to get your opinions about this type of research and whether you find it to be valid and worthwhile. I understand that RCT (large group, nomothetic designs) are unambiguously the mainstay of clinical science and "the design of choice" because of potential issues with intersubject variability and the importance of considering aggregate benefit. But are these n=1 studies also a viable option for understanding human behavior? Does this type of idiothetic research qualify as a true experiment and can it stand next to the more mainstream, large N studies? Does it hold water in terms of rigorous, scientific research? Thanks!