Over the last 20 years, researchers have been mixing qualitative and quantitative
approaches, but mixed methods research represents a new movement that arose
in response to the currents of qualitative and quantitative research, considered
separately. Little has been published on the use of polar coordinate analysis in
psychotherapy. This type of analysis can provide detailed information and integrate
the qualitative-quantitative analysis. Even less has been published on the analysis
of ASD children’s behavior. The main aim of this study was to implement this mixed
methods methodology to analyze patterns of social behaviors in a group of adolescents
with ASD during a group social competence intervention program. Moreover, we
wanted to see whether an observational scale could be combined fruitfully with polar
coordinate analysis and to investigate whether typical ASD behaviors show similar
interrelations (prospective and retrospective sequentialities) as behaviors observed in
psychotherapy. We used an adaptation from the Social Skills Training Program (UC
Davis, California). We observed that each participant took a unique course, increasing
or decreasing the number and quality of their social behaviors. In accordance with
previous literature, results suggest some increment in the amount of appropriate social
conduct. We did not detect a generalized progress pattern but agreed that there were
changes between the beginning and end of the intervention. Therefore, we consider
that observational methodology is useful in the field of psychotherapy and ASD, offering
detailed information about changes and development that cannot be obtained with
other traditional measures, such as questionnaires