4.8 • 648 Ratings
🗓️ 11 August 2023
⏱️ 95 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Drs. Jane Howard and Gina Green join me today in a podcast that could've spanned several hours. In the time we had, we did manage to cover quite a bit of territory, including the following:
In addition to these topics, we probably spent the most time talking about the empirical support for ABA interventions for individuals with Autism. In doing so, we discussed the large research projects that Jane and Gina led, what to make of some of the criticisms of this literature that is starting to gain some notoriety, and what research questions we still need answers to.
Jane and Gina mentioned numerous studies and resources, and I've done my best to catalog them below:
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0:00.0 | Hey, everyone. Thanks for joining me in session 235 of the behavioral observations podcast. I'm joined by |
0:05.8 | Dr. Jane Howard and Gina Green. And honestly, this is a podcast that could have gone on for several |
0:12.1 | hours. We talked about a whole lot of things. We talked about what Gina has been up to since retiring |
0:17.7 | from APBA. We talk about Jane's career and behavior analysis, including how she |
0:23.3 | got it in the field, some of her many accomplishments, including recently being honored as a fellow |
0:28.0 | of ABAI and what she's working on these days. We spent a bit of time talking about the basics |
0:34.1 | of research design, including why some experimental questions |
0:37.6 | lend themselves to certain designs over others. |
0:40.4 | In this segment, we also covered group or between subjects designs and meta-analyses, |
0:45.1 | which are relevant to understanding how to look at some of these studies in the ABA outcome |
0:52.2 | literature. |
0:54.0 | We talk about the distinction between criterion and norm reference assessments. |
0:58.9 | The number of initiatives and resources in the general realm of ABA treatment, including |
1:05.2 | the current state of licensure, the ABA coding coalition, the Autism Commission on Quality, |
1:10.4 | Casp, we go deep into that. |
1:13.6 | We spent also some time talking about just epistemology more generally, critical thinking, |
1:20.4 | how to be a healthy skeptic. And in addition to these topics, we probably spent the most |
1:24.8 | amount of time discussing the empirical support for ABA interventions for individuals with autism. In doing so, we probably spent the most amount of time discussing the empirical support for |
1:28.0 | ABA interventions for individuals with autism. In doing so, we discussed the large research |
1:33.3 | projects that Jane and Gina led, talked about what to make of some of the criticisms of this |
1:39.0 | literature that's starting to gain some notoriety and what research questions we still need answers to. |
1:45.9 | Jane and Gina mentioned numerous studies and resources. |
... |
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