1996
DOI: 10.1007/bf01874896
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Practical guidelines in the use of symptom validity and other psychological tests to measure malingering and symptom exaggeration in traumatic brain injury cases

Abstract: The detection of malingering or symptom exaggeration has become an essential component in forensic neuropsychological evaluations, particularly in cases involving personal injury claims. Symptom Validity Tests refer to those measures that can be utilized to detect test performance that is so poor that it is below the level of probability, often times even among brain-damaged populations. This article outlines legal standards for expert testimony in regard to forensic neuropsychological personal injury evaluati… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Often, such performance is so poor that it is below the level of probability, even for impaired populations. 76 Hiscock and Hiscock 77 refined this technique, and their work served as a foundation for many of the SVT procedures that are currently in use today. Because comprehensive reviews of SVT are available in the literature, 76,78 the following measures have been selected to demonstrate the usefulness and application of SVT.…”
Section: Symptom Validity Testingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Often, such performance is so poor that it is below the level of probability, even for impaired populations. 76 Hiscock and Hiscock 77 refined this technique, and their work served as a foundation for many of the SVT procedures that are currently in use today. Because comprehensive reviews of SVT are available in the literature, 76,78 the following measures have been selected to demonstrate the usefulness and application of SVT.…”
Section: Symptom Validity Testingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the present time, forced-choice procedures have the strongest empirical support of any technique for detection of exaggerated neuropsychological impairment (Etcoff & Kampfer, 1996). Forced-choice procedures, when stringent decision rules are employed, offer the advantage of high specificity (Binder & Kelly, 1996;Frederick, Sarfaty, Johnston, & Powel, 1994;Greiffenstein et al, 1994).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The last decade has witnessed rapid advancement in the detection of malingering, and now more than ever neuropsychologists have at their disposal a number of well-validated tests for assessing sub-optimal performance on neuropsychological tests (see Etcoff & Kampfer, 1996;Heubrock & Petermann, 1998;Vickery, Berry, Inman, Harris, & Orey, 2001 for reviews). However, these measures rely on the malingerer's ignorance of their true purpose, and concern has been voiced that infringement of test security via academia or sympathetic attorneys may render current tests ineffective (Rogers, 1997b;Wetter & Corrigan, 1995;Youngjohn, 1995).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%