“…The results show the distribution of publications by topic to which dual authors have contributed to either journal over the years. The topics on which dual authors published most frequently across both journals include stimulus control and stimulus equivalence (e.g., Fields, Doran, & Marroquin, ; Porritt, Van Wagner, & Poling, ), behavioral pharmacology and addictive behavior (e.g., Smith & Bickel, ), the matching law (e.g., Alferink et al, ), schedules of reinforcement (e.g., Lee, McComas, & Jawor, ), verbal behavior (e.g., Horne, Hughes, & Lowe, ), delayed reinforcement (e.g., Reilly & Lattal, ), behavioral momentum (e.g., Mace & Belfiore, ), and field‐related issues (e.g., Morris & Smith, ). Topics that have been shown to be of interest to dual authors across both journals but had generated a smaller number of studies include matching to sample (e.g., Fields et al, ), reinforcer properties (e.g., Neef, Mace, & Shade, ), generalization (e.g., Lima & Abreu‐Rodrigues, ), behavioral history (e.g., Pipkin & Vollmer, ), and extinction (e.g., Mace et al, ).…”