“…Previous empirical studies of the MMPI‐2‐RF support the utility of the instrument in measuring PTSD symptomology. Descriptive analyses of MMPI‐2‐RF scale scores among both veteran and student samples with trauma exposure or PTSD diagnoses consistently demonstrate clinically elevated scores (i.e., T ≥ 65) on scales across psychological domains, including internalizing (emotional/internalizing dysfunction [EID], demoralization [RCd], low positive emotions [RC2], dysfunctional negative emotions [RC7], suicidal/death ideation [SUI], anxiety [AXY], introversion/low positive emotionality‐revised [INTR‐r]), somatic (somatic complaints [RC1], malaise [MLS], gastrointestinal complaints [GIC], neurological complaints [NUC], cognitive complaints [COG]), and interpersonal scales (social avoidance [SAV], disaffiliativeness [DSF]; Ingram et al, 2020; Mason et al, 2013; McDevitt‐Murphy et al, 2007; McManus et al, 2018; Meyers et al, 2013). Some authors (i.e., Meyers et al, 2013) have also observed elevations among trauma‐exposed veterans on scales in externalizing (aggression [AGG], family problems [FML]) and thought dysfunction domains (thought dysfunction [THD], persecutory ideation [RC6], aberrant experiences [RC8], psychoticism‐revised [PSYC‐r]).…”