Rad N Bad Podcast

Episode 33: Who the Hell is That? The High-Tech Future of Autism Diagnostics with Dr. Cheryl Tierney, Chief Medical Officer at EarlyPoint

47 min · 13. apr. 2026
episode Episode 33: Who the Hell is That? The High-Tech Future of Autism Diagnostics with Dr. Cheryl Tierney, Chief Medical Officer at EarlyPoint cover

Description

In this episode of the Rad N Bad Podcast, Sean Yocum and Mike Carrero sit down with Dr. Cheryl Tierney, Chief Medical Officer at EarlyPoint, to discuss a technological seismic shift in the world of autism evaluations. For decades, the diagnostic process has been a subjective, "bottlenecked mess" relying on antiquated tools (some still asking if kids can use a VCR!). Dr. Tierney introduces EarlyPoint, the first FDA-cleared eye-tracking biomarker designed to provide an objective "yes/no" diagnostic aid for children aged 16 to 95 months. Sean, Mike, and Dr. Tierney dive deep into how 12 minutes of passive video watching can capture tens of thousands of data points, comparing a child's social visual engagement to a normative sample with clinical precision. Key highlights include: * Beyond the "Wait and See" Trap: How EarlyPoint helps pediatricians in rural America skip the two-year waitlist and diagnose within the medical home. * The "Subjective-Objective" Problem: A critical look at why traditional tools like the ADOS can be influenced by clinician bias or cultural/language barriers. * Proactive vs. Reactive: Using eye-tracking to identify neurodivergent learning patterns before "outward symptoms" even fully emerge, allowing for intervention during peak neuroplasticity. * The "Billion-Dollar Fridge": The story of how this tech shrunk from the size of a refrigerator to a portable, handheld device. * Neurodiversity & Eye Gaze: Clarifying that the goal isn't "training eye contact," but ensuring children don't miss vital social learning opportunities. Is technology finally catching up to the science of behavior? Join the guys as they vet the innovators turning the "Autism Industrial Complex" on its head. To better understand how EarlyPoint works, it tracks where a child focuses during social interactions. While neurotypical children often focus on "social anchors" like eyes and mouths to gather information, children with autism may focus on non-social or peripheral details, leading to different data clusters. https://earlipointhealth.com/ [https://earlipointhealth.com/]

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53 episodes

episode Episode 40: Who the Hell is Dr. Erin Moran? From Backpacking Kazakhstan to Dismantling Corporate ABA artwork

Episode 40: Who the Hell is Dr. Erin Moran? From Backpacking Kazakhstan to Dismantling Corporate ABA

Most people in the tech space claim they understand the frontline trenches. They haven’t. This week, Sean and Mike pull back the curtain on the corporate contingencies crippling clinical quality, and they are joined by someone who has lived a literal clinical Odyssey: Dr. Erin Moran, Director of Clinical Innovation at Hi-Rasmus. Dr. Moran didn’t just climb a corporate tech ladder. She has been thrown into a room with 38 six-year-olds in a Thai port city with zero support. She has backpacked into the freezing winter of Eastern Kazakhstan with nothing but shorts and a tank top to build parent-led behavior programs from scratch, getting her passport stamped in a dark back alley just to help moms who were told their children's autism was their fault. She has sat on the highly critical academic stages of London as the only BCBA in the room, defending the core science against massive systemic stigma. Sean, Mike, and Erin strip away the marketing fluff and toxic positivity to expose the systemic failures of modern, commercialized operations, including: * The Rebrand Trap: Why the anti-ABA movement isn't attacking our scientific principles, but rather a rigid, high-hour commercialized therapy model that operates like a corporate religion. * The 40-Hour Checkbox Crisis: Tearing down the passive, uninspiring video training models that are producing catastrophic 18% RBT exam pass rates across major national providers, and why real Behavior Skills Training (BST) cannot be scaled through a computer screen. * The Circus Trick of Dependency: Why an intervention that only works when a clinician is standing in the room is a total failure, and how Erin used pure science to train Kazakhstani mothers to become the university professors training the next generation of therapists. * Engineering Software with Science: How Erin is taking her global, boots-on-the-ground experience to design data systems that eliminate administrative headaches, supercharge supervisor feedback loops, and give BCBAs their time back to focus on the work that actually matters. Stop hiding behind empty corporate buzzwords and traditionalist dogma. If your therapy requires rigid compliance and endless paperwork, your environmental engineering is broken. The science doesn’t choose a side—it analyzes contingencies. Tune in to hear how a global perspective is rewriting the status quo of standard industry technology. Stay bold. Stay contrarian. Stay Rad N Bad. https://www.linkedin.com/in/emoran1/

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episode Episode 39: No Man's Land-The Forbidden E-Word: Why You Can’t Escape Extinction artwork

Episode 39: No Man's Land-The Forbidden E-Word: Why You Can’t Escape Extinction

In this episode of the No Man’s Land series, Sean and Mike tackle the 'forbidden E-word' of ABA: Extinction. While cancel culture and critics often paint extinction as cold or outdated, the guys pull the curtain back to show that it’s not a trend—it’s a law of behavior. Whether you call it 'planned ignoring' or 'compassionate support,' if you change a reinforcement contingency, you’re implementing extinction. Sean and Mike dive into the messy reality of extinction bursts, the 'vending machine' analogy of human behavior, and the controversial rise of 'Kind Extinction.' They argue that the science hasn't changed; our clinical skill just finally caught up. Stop avoiding the uncomfortable and start understanding the mechanics of how learning actually happens when the 'house rules' change.

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episode Episode 38: No Man's Land-The Myth of Ascent: Why Choice is Just a Contingency artwork

Episode 38: No Man's Land-The Myth of Ascent: Why Choice is Just a Contingency

Is "assent" the future of ethical ABA, or is it a clinical retreat into "fragile tolerance"? In this installment of the No Man’s Land series, Sean Yocum and Mike Carrero step directly into one of the most emotionally charged debates in behavioral health. While the field currently treats assent as an ethical evolution, Sean and Mike strip away the marketing and the buzzwords to look at the raw mechanics underneath. From a radical behaviorist perspective, does "assent" even exist? Or is it simply a hypothetical construct—a label we’ve placed on behavior that is actually being shaped by environmental contingencies? Sean and Mike dive deep into: * The Reality Gap: Are we preparing learners for a world that requires persistence and resilience, or are we engineering "safe spaces" that fail to translate to the real world? * Buzzwords vs. Science: Why "Trauma-Informed Care" and "Assent-Based Care" are often just rebrands for what should have been good behavioral design all along. * The Middle Ground: Moving past the extremes of forced compliance and unlimited refusal to focus on shaping, reinforcement schedules, and functional communication. * The Radical Lens: Reframing refusal not as a philosophical choice, but as critical data that tells us exactly where our behavioral design is failing. Stop asking if your learner "assents" and start asking what your environment is reinforcing. It’s time to move beyond the "feel-good" terminology and get back to the science of shaping independence.

29. maj 202636 min
episode Episode 37: Who the Hell is This? Solving the Access to Care Bottleneck with Amol Deshpande from Frontera Health artwork

Episode 37: Who the Hell is This? Solving the Access to Care Bottleneck with Amol Deshpande from Frontera Health

The ABA industry has an access problem, and throwing generic corporate software at it isn't fixing a damn thing. In this episode of Rad N Bad, Sean and Mike sit down with Amol Deshpande, the founder of Frontera Health, a Silicon Valley veteran who is injecting radical disruption into the behavioral health tech space. Driven by his personal experience as a parent of an autistic son who achieved a life-changing outcome through high-quality early intervention, Amol isn't here to build another corporate tool. He’s here to dismantle the bottlenecks keeping families stuck on waitlists for months just to get a label. We strip away the marketing crap and dive deep into what it actually takes to scale access to quality care without burning clinicians into the ground. We talk about utilizing advanced, clinician-built AI to obliterate the administrative nightmare of report writing, and why billing platforms do absolutely nothing to change what happens in a child's home on a Tuesday night. Amol pulls no filters as we tackle the toxic tech trends plaguing the sector—specifically software providers who attempt to build a business "moat" by hoarding clinical data and blocking integrations. We unpack the line between clinical augmentation and replacement, why parent-mediated therapy models are the next major frontier, and how passive data collection through video could revolutionize accountability and RBT supervision. Stop letting corporate billing convenience dictate your clinical priorities. It’s time to use technology to eliminate the noise so we can get back to what actually matters: human connection, clinical depth, and radical behavior change. www.fronterahealth.com [www.fronterahealth.com]

20. maj 20261 h 4 min