Matching, behavioral economics, and teleological behaviorism: Final cause analysis of substance use and health behavior

J Exp Anal Behav. 2023 Jan;119(1):240-258. doi: 10.1002/jeab.815. Epub 2022 Dec 21.

Abstract

Howard Rachlin and his contemporaries pioneered basic behavioral science innovations that have been usefully applied to advance understanding of human substance use disorder and related health behaviors. We briefly summarize the innovations of molar behaviorism (the matching law), behavioral economics, and teleological behaviorism. Behavioral economics and teleological behaviorism's focus on final causes are especially illuminating for these applied fields. Translational and applied research are summarized for laboratory studies of temporal discounting and economic demand, cohort studies of alcohol and other drug use in the natural environment, and experimental behavioral economic modeling of health behavior-related public health policies. We argue that the teleological behavioral perspective on health behavior is conducive to and merges seamlessly with the contemporary socioecological model of health behavior, which broadens the contextual influences (e.g., community, economic, infrastructure, health care access and policy) of individuals' substance use and other health risk behaviors. Basic-to-applied translations to date have been successful and bode well for continued applications of basic science areas pioneered by Howard Rachlin and his contemporaries.

Keywords: behavioral economics; molar behaviorism; socioecological determinants of health; substance use; teleological behaviorism.

MeSH terms

  • Behaviorism*
  • Economics, Behavioral
  • Health Behavior
  • Humans
  • Substance-Related Disorders* / therapy