» Articles » PMID: 27606182

What Studying Leadership Can Teach Us About the Science of Behavior

Overview
Journal Behav Anal
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2016 Sep 9
PMID 27606182
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Throughout history, individuals have changed the world in significant ways, forging new paths; demonstrating remarkable capacity to inspire others to follow; and repeatedly showing independence, resilience, consistency, and commitment to principle. However, significant cultural change is rarely accomplished single-handedly; instead, it results from the complex and dynamic interaction of groups of individuals. To illustrate how leaders participate in cultural phenomena, I describe how a few individuals helped to establish the Cold War. In this analysis, I distinguish two types of cultural phenomena: metacontingencies, involving lineages of interlocking behavioral contingencies, and cultural cusps, involving complicated, unique, and nonreplicable interrelations between individuals and circumstances. I conclude that by analyzing leaders' actions and their results, we can appreciate that cultural and behavioral phenomena are different, and although cultural phenomena are inherently complex and in many cases do not lend themselves to replication, not only should the science of behavior account for them, cultural phenomena should also constitute a major area of behavior analysis study and application.

Citing Articles

Advancing and Integrating the Cusp Concept to Understand Behavioral Repertoire Dynamics.

Becker A, Kuhn R, Pinkelman S Perspect Behav Sci. 2024; 47(1):29-54.

PMID: 38660500 PMC: 11035530. DOI: 10.1007/s40614-023-00389-8.


Creating Inclusive and Equitable Cultural Practices by Linking Leadership to Systemic Change.

Esquierdo-Leal J, Houmanfar R Behav Anal Pract. 2021; 14(2):499-512.

PMID: 33613858 PMC: 7877509. DOI: 10.1007/s40617-020-00519-7.


Qualitative Systematic Review of Emotional Processes and Social Interaction: Behavioral Analysis in Contexts of Political Violence.

Ribero-Marulanda S, Novoa-Gomez M Int J Psychol Res (Medellin). 2020; 12(2):91-104.

PMID: 32612798 PMC: 7318383. DOI: 10.21500/20112084.4053.


How a Few Individuals Brought about a Cultural Cusp: From a Mexican Mural Program to a Movement.

Malott M Perspect Behav Sci. 2020; 42(4):773-814.

PMID: 31976460 PMC: 6901651. DOI: 10.1007/s40614-019-00211-4.


Editorial: Emerging Cultural and Behavioral Systems Science.

Cihon T, Mattaini M Perspect Behav Sci. 2020; 42(4):699-711.

PMID: 31976456 PMC: 6901637. DOI: 10.1007/s40614-019-00237-8.


References
1.
Glenn S . Individual behavior, culture, and social change. Behav Anal. 2012; 27(2):133-51. PMC: 2755396. DOI: 10.1007/BF03393175. View

2.
Rosales-Ruiz J, Baer D . Behavioral cusps: a developmental and pragmatic concept for behavior analysis. J Appl Behav Anal. 1997; 30(3):533-44. PMC: 1284066. DOI: 10.1901/jaba.1997.30-533. View

3.
Bosch S, Fuqua R . Behavioral cusps: a model for selecting target behaviors. J Appl Behav Anal. 2001; 34(1):123-5. PMC: 1284293. DOI: 10.1901/jaba.2001.34-123. View

4.
Malagodi E, Jackson K . Behavior analysts and cultural analysis: Troubles and issues. Behav Anal. 2012; 12(1):17-33. PMC: 2742025. DOI: 10.1007/BF03392474. View

5.
Glenn S . Contingencies and metacontingencies: Toward a synthesis of behavior analysis and cultural materialism. Behav Anal. 2012; 11(2):161-79. PMC: 2741963. DOI: 10.1007/BF03392470. View