“…Additionally, wholly erroneous conceptualizations have also begun to emerge, conflating EV with sensitivity to brain injury (Torralva et al, 2012), tests’ ability to differentiate groups (Kallweit et al, 2020; Montgomery et al, 2010), or construct or concurrent validity evidenced by associations with other tests (Doherty et al, 2015; Jovanovski et al, 2012; La Paglia et al, 2012, 2014; Laloyaux et al, 2014; Raspelli et al, 2011). Importantly, for some authors, EV appears to have become completely decoupled from prediction of functional outcome, as some studies that examined the association between the test and functional outcome failed to draw any connection between their results and EV (Alderman et al, 2003; Chevignard et al, 2010; Chicchi Giglioli et al, 2021; Finnanger et al, 2022; Júlio et al, 2019; Laloyaux et al, 2014; Longaud-Valès et al, 2016; Moriyama et al, 2002; O’Shea et al, 2010; Oliveira et al, 2016; Orkin Simon et al, 2022; Verdejo-García & Pérez-García, 2007; Zartman et al, 2013). Notably, some authors even claimed evidence of EV in face of their own negative findings about veridicality (Chevignard et al, 2009; Clark et al, 2017; Gilboa et al, 2019).…”