4.8 • 648 Ratings
🗓️ 1 February 2021
⏱️ 69 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In the sixth edition of the Inside JABA Series, I'm joined by Inside JABA regulars Drs. Linda LeBlanc and Claire St. Peter, as well as Dr. Jesse Dallery, to talk about the paper he and his colleagues published in the latest issue of the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis.
This paper fits nicely in JABA's ongoing series on Public Health and Telehealth, and is a great example of the potential for Behavior Analysis to be used for so much more than the type of work many BCBAs are doing currently. As Linda states during the show, "public health is all around us," and that public health challenges, at the end of the day, are behavioral in nature. As an aside, if you're not currently subscribed to JABA, you can do so here.
Here are some of the topics we discussed:
Here are the links to papers, podcasts, apps, and other resources we talked about:
As with previous Inside JABA Series Podcasts, this one is eligible for BACB approved Continuing Education, click here to learn more! While we're on the topic of CEUs, allow me to suggest subscribing to the Behavioral Observations' Patreon page, where enrolled patrons get access to discounts in the BOP CEU store, as well as other purveyors of behavior analytic training. To learn more, head over to patreon.com/behavioralobservations!
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hey everybody, welcome to session 146 of the behavioral observations podcast. |
0:05.1 | This is also the sixth edition of the Inside Java series. |
0:09.2 | I'm joined today by Inside Java regulars, Dr.'s Linda LeBlanc and Claire St. Peter, |
0:15.1 | and we are joined by a special guest, Dr. Jesse Dallery, from the University of Florida. |
0:20.5 | And in today's episode, we're talking all |
0:22.2 | about public health, and in particular the paper that Jesse and his colleagues just published in the |
0:27.4 | latest episode of, excuse me, issue of Java. It's a journal, not a podcast. All right, so this paper |
0:34.2 | fits nicely in with Java's ongoing series on public health and telehealth. |
0:39.1 | And it's a great example of the potential for behavior analysis to be used for so much more than the type of work many BCBAs are doing currently. |
0:47.3 | As Linda states during the show, public health is something that's just all around us and that public health challenges at the end of the day are behavioral in nature. Smoking is just a prime example of that. And as an aside, if you're not |
1:02.7 | currently subscribed to Java, go to behavioral observations.com for the show notes for this episode |
1:08.2 | and start your subscription today. |
1:11.6 | You can get it in print or in just an e-version. |
1:16.2 | And again, the link for that will be in today's show notes. |
1:20.6 | So in today's show, we talk about the following topics, |
1:23.8 | the current scope of cigarette smoking in the United States, |
1:27.6 | how cigarette smoking occurs disproportionately in individuals of lower socioeconomic status. |
1:33.2 | Previous research in the contingency management of cigarette smoking. |
1:37.3 | The logistical challenges of previous work in contingency management. |
1:42.2 | How Jesse and his research team address these challenges in the current |
1:45.7 | study by developing a mobile system of carbon monoxide sampling, and the relationship between |
1:52.1 | the literature of contingency management and delay discounting and more generally behavioral |
... |
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