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Volume 29 | 2006 | Number 2

Interbehaviorists in ABA

By Dr. Thomas Sharpe

The Interbehaviorist Special Interest Group (SIG) within the Association for Behavior Analysis International promotes discussion, development, and organization of basic assumptions, theories, and methods pertaining to Interbehavioral Psychology in specific and Behavior Systems theory and application in general. Original contributors to, and organizers of, the SIG were guided by the scientific principles posited by J. R. Kantor. Kantor’s original Interbehaviorism promotes a contextualistic, integrated-field approach to the natural science of behavior, of which many contemporary theoretical positions and practical applications within the experimental and applied analysis of behavior are compatible. To this end, the SIG encourages contributions from a variety of disciplines, including ongoing work in the areas of psychology, education, and the social and physical sciences.

SIG members can be relied on to discuss recently developed technologies that support more comprehensive descriptions of psychological events, and, in concert with evolving system-oriented methodologies within ABA, the SIG provides a forum for dissemination of multiple-event and other interactional analysis methods that can be used productively in experimental and applied behavior analyses. A sampling of areas of activity currently engaged in by SIG members includes computer-based learning systems, software-based data gathering and analyses tools, constructional approaches to social problems, historicocritical analyses, operational analyses, large-scale clinical service delivery systems, and self-reflection.

Currently, the SIG is experiencing a period of reorganization and rejuvenation. Guided by the leadership over the years from Ed Morris and colleagues at the University of Kansas, Dennis Delprato at Eastern Michigan University, and most recently a variety of individuals in the Psychology Department at the University of Nevada, Reno, the SIG hopes to provide a forum for information exchange and renewed interest organized around interbehavioral and systems theory principles and practice.

SIG objectives will be addressed through the following activities:

Membership is encouraged through initial e-mail address submission to Tom Sharpe, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, sharpe@unlv.nevada.edu. Current and past members will be included in all SIG correspondence through compiling of existing historical SIG membership lists. As a function of membership, a fifteen dollar ($15) contribution is encouraged to help support ongoing and intended SIG activities.

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