“…First, it might improve the quality of the evaluation by facilitating rapport with the evaluee or increasing their engagement. For instance, Brodsky and Goldenson (2022) indicate that interpersonal or behavioral feedback (e.g., "I can see how difficult this is for you") can enhance rapport and redirect distracted evaluees. In addition, offering feedback provides an opportunity for the evaluator to gather more clinical data, for instance, the evaluee's understanding of a feature of their presentation that might otherwise be ambiguous (e.g., limited eye contact), the evaluee's understanding of the information provided to them (e.g., regarding the legal process, relevant to competence to stand trial), their reaction to clinical information (e.g., a diagnosis, relevant to their insight, which can inform risk assessments), or their response or change in presentation after hearing an evaluator's concerns about exaggeration or feigning.…”