| Michael F. Cataldo, Ph.D. Director of the Department of Behavioral Psychology, Kennedy Krieger Institute Michael Cataldo, Ph.D. is the Director of the Department of Behavioral Psychology at Kennedy Krieger Institute. He is also a Professor of Behavioral Biology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and an Adjunct Professor of Psychology at the University of Maryland. |
Since 1975, Dr. Cataldo has been the Director of the Department of Behavioral Psychology at the Kennedy Krieger Institute. He has taught at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine since 1975 and at the University of Maryland since 1984.
Dr. Cataldo’s research has focused on the influence of basic operant training on problems of child health and development. He has shown that behavioral problems in persons with developmental disabilities are functionally related to the environmental consequences of the behaviors. By changing the unit of analysis from discrete behaviors to groups, Dr. Cataldo and his colleagues have established that: 1) the same functional relationships that exist between consequences and discrete behaviors also exist between consequences and groups, or classes, of behaviors; 2) one class of behaviors can be related directly or inversely to another class, so that altering one or a few behaviors of one class alters all behaviors of the other class; 3) cooperation with instructions is a key class of behaviors. Clinical application of this information has shown that by increasing certain socially adaptive responses (e.g., cooperation with instructions) intrusive and time-consuming treatment for aggressive behavior and self-injury can be avoided.
Operant learning influences have also been studied in relation to certain medical problems. Initial work with patients with muscular disorders (cerebral palsy, dystonia musculorm deformans, hemiplegia, etc) led to behavioral treatment for fecal incontinence in children with myelomeningocele as well as for some with feeding disorders. Other applications have included improving patient cooperation with unfamiliar or uncomfortable treatments such as MRI, chemotherapy and dental work. In addition, Dr. Cataldo hypothesized that the behavior of children in intensive care units reflected a condition suppression phenomenon. By manipulating positive events in the ICU, he observed immediate positive changes in behavior, which indicates that environmental circumstances influenced children’s behavior in the ICU, not medical status or psychiatric trauma.
Lastly, working with colleagues in ambulatory care and public health, Dr. Cataldo has shown that operant approaches to child behavior and some medical problems can not only improve outcomes for patients but can also reduce utilization of subsequent medical care.
McIlvane, W.J. & Cataldo, M.F. (1996). "On the clinical relevance of animal models for the study of human mental retardation." Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2, 188-196.
DeLeon, I.G., Rodriguez-Catter, V. & Cataldo, M.F (2002). Current treatment of self-injurious behavior: Standards of care and their research implications. In Schroeder, S. R., Oster-Granite, M.L., & Thompson T. (Eds). Self-Injurious Behavior: Gene- Brain- Behavior Relationships 4:81-92, Washington, D. C.: APA Books Publishing Company.
Slifer, K.J., Koontz, K.L. & Cataldo, M.F. (2002). "Operant contingency based preparation of children for functional magnetic resonance imaging." Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 35(2), 191-194.
Schlund, M.W., & Cataldo, M.F. (2005). "Integrating functional neuroimaging and human operant research: Brain activation correlated with presentation of discriminative stimuli." Journal of Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 84(3), 505-519.
Cataldo, M.F., Kahng, S., DeLeon, I.G., Martens, B.K., Friman, P.C., and Cataldo, M. (2007). Behavioral principles, assessment, and therapy. In M.L. Batshaw, N.J., Roizen, & L. Pelligrino (Eds.), Children with Disabilities 6th Edition, 539-555. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.
Schlund, M.W., Cataldo, M.F., and Hoehn-Saric, R. (2008). "Neural correlates of derived relational responding: Evidence for ‘binding’ arbitary conditional relations in the hippocampus." Behavioral and Brain Functions 4, 6.
Director, Department of Behavioral Psychology
Kennedy Krieger Institute
707 North Broadway
(Map & Directions)
Telephone: (443) 923-2900
Facsimile: (443) 923-2985
E-Mail: cataldo@kennedykrieger.org
Professor of Psychiatry
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine


