Table of Contents

 

1

Assessment of Malingering and Falsification:Conceptual Foundations and Sources of Error    David Faust, David C. Ahern, Ana J. Bridges, and Leslie J. Yonce

1

2

Assessment of Malingering and Falsification: Pushing the Boundaries of Knowledge in Research and Clinical Practice    David Faust, David C. Ahern, Ana J. Bridges, and Leslie J. Yonce

47

3

Noncredible Performance in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury    Russell D. Pella, B.D. Hill, Ashvind N. Singh, Jill S. Hayes, and Wm. Drew Gouvier

121

4

Detuction of Malingering Using Forced Techniques   Juan Manuel Gutierrez and Ruben C. Gur

151

5

Factitious Responding and Malingered Memory Disorder   J. Michael Williams and Kelly Jones

169

6

Performance on the WMT, MSVT, and NV-MSVT in Children with Developmental Disabilities and in Adults with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury    Paul Green, Lloyd Flaro, Robbi Brockhaus, and Jorge Montijo

201

7

Detecting Malingering on the Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery   Charles J. Golden and Christine A. Grier

221

8

Detection of Malingering and Invalid Test Results Using the Halstead-Reitan Battery   Ralph M. Reitan and Debftah-Wolfson

241

9

Detection of Feigning of Head Injury Symptoms on the MMPI-2    David T.R, Berry, Lindsey J. Schipper, and Jessica A. Clark

273

10

Explaining Symptom ValiditjWTesting to the Trier of Fact   Robert J. McCaffrey, Julie K. Lynch, antfkaura L.S. Howe

287

11

Distinguishing Genuine from Malingered Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Head Injury Litigation    Laura L.S. Howe

301

12

Clinical Detection of Malingering   Lawrence C. Hartlage

333

13

Clinical Acumen, Common Sense, and Data-Based Decision Making in the Assessment of Dissimulation During Head Injury Litigation   Cecil R. Reynolds and Arthur MacNeill Horton,Jr

351

 

Index

371