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2005, Summer

ABA Establishes Fellow Program

2004 Founding Fellows and Committee

2005 Fellows of ABA

2006 Fellows Nominations Sought

2004-2005 SABA Donors

Behavior Analysis Expanding in China

Organizational Members

Seeking Funding for Behavior Research, Part II

Updates from ABA’s Boards and Committees

Updates from ABA’s Affiliated Chapters

Updates from ABA’s Special Interest Groups

Updates from the Behavioral Community

Calendar of Upcoming Behavioral Conferences

SABA Donations

Newsletter

Volume 28 | 2005 | Number 2

Murray Sidman

Murray Sidman

A complete behavior analyst, Murray Sidman has been in the forefront of the field since its inception. He has been a fundamental mover and shaper of its direction through his conceptual writings and extensive programs of research, in such fundamental and broad-sweeping areas as: scientific methods, avoidance behavior, stimulus control and errorless learning, the social impact of coercion in society and so much more. For these and his numerous other stellar achievements, he has been the recipient of numerous awards, including, among others, the award for International Dissemination of Behavior Analysis, EAHB SIG Distinguished Career Award, the Dole Award, Lifetime Achievement Award.

Below is a brief biographical sketch from the 2004 CALABA program , where he was an invited speaker:

Dr. Sidman received a Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia University in 1952 and went on to make contributions of enormous significance to the field of behavior analysis. He has held positions as a Research Psychologist at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and the E.K. Shriver Center for Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, where he served as director of the Behavioral Sciences Department. Dr. Sidman has taught countless students at Columbia University, Harvard Medical School, University of Nevada, Northeastern University, and Johns Hopkins University. His influence is international, as Dr. Sidman has held academic appointments at the University of São Paulo in Brasil, Keio University in Tokyo, Japan and the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand.
Dr. Sidman’s publications in peer-refereed journals number close to 100 and have defined much of our current understanding of stimulus control, stimulus equivalence, and avoidance behavior. His 1960 text, Tactics of Scientific Research, is considered the first primer on within- subject research methodology. It is a classic that is still used today. Other contributions have extended to important social problems. The second edition of his book Coercion and Its Fallout was published in 2000, and his treatment of “Terrorism as Behavior” is in press in Behavior and Social Issues. Dr. Sidman is currently at work on his newest text, Applied Behavior Analysis: How and Why.

Back to 2005 Fellows listing