Title: Detecting Cognitive Malingering: State of the Art
1Detecting Cognitive MalingeringState of the Art
- David Stigge-Kaufman
- Forensic Neuropsychology
- July 13, 2006
2Malingering
- Definition
- Intentional production of false or greatly
exaggerated symptoms for the purpose of attaining
some identifiable external reward (Iverson
Binder, 2000) - Often viewed as pejorative and controversial
- In contrast to making the diagnosis of
malingering, clinicians seem to be much more
comfortable diagnosing people with brain damage,
schizophrenia, alcohol or drug abuse, or
personality disorders. (p. 831) - Diagnostic Considerations
- V65.2 (DSM-IV-TR)
- Additional condition that may be a focus of
clinical attention - Differential diagnosis
- Factitious Disorder, Somatoform Disorders,
Depression
3Malingering Checklist
- Presence of a substantial external incentive
- Evidence from neuropsychological testing
- Definite negative response bias (below chance on
a forced-choice measure of cognitive function) - Probable response bias on a validity test
- Discrepancies between test data and known
patterns of brain functioning - Discrepancies between test data and observed
behavior - Discrepancy between test data and reliable
collateral reports - Discrepancy between test data and documented
background history - Evidence from self-report
- Self-reported history discrepancy with documented
history - Self-reported symptom discrepancy with known
patterns of brain functioning - Self-reported symptom discrepancy with behavioral
observations - Self-reported symptom discrepancy with reports
from close informants - Evidence of exaggerated or fabricated
psychological dysfunction - Behaviors meeting criteria from groups B and C
not fully accounted for by psychiatric,
neurologic, or developmental factors
Slick et al., 1999 Lezak et al., 2004
4Malingered Neurocognitive Dysfunction (MND)
- Definite MND
- Presence of a substantial external incentive
- Definite negative response bias
- Negative response bias cannot be otherwise
accounted for.
- Probable MND
- Presence of a substantial external incentive
- gt 2 types of N? evidence, or, 1 type of N?
evidence plus 1 type of evidence from self-report - Behaviors cannot be otherwise accounted for
-
- not including negative response bias
Slick et al., 1999
5Clinical Application
- Case Example
- A middle aged electrician had passed out at work
due to a heat stroke. He was evaluated to
determine if the residual memory difficulty was
sufficiently severe to preclude his return to
work. Across all three delay sets for easy items
of the Victoria Symptom Validity Test, this man
had 24/24 recognition. In contrast, he gave only
three correct responses on the 24 hard items.
Lezak et al., 2004, p. 776
6Clinical Application
- Case Example
- Because 24/24 easy items were correct but only
3/24 hard items were correct, this did not
suggest a random response pattern. Normal, above
chance performance on the easy items demonstrated
the patients understanding of the instruction
and that he was not confused about how to
respond. The below chance performances for the
three hard conditions have corresponding
statistical probabilities of .14, .004, and .004.
Thus, when treated as independent samples, the
probability of occurrence is .0000022 (.14 X .004
X .004). This success/failure pattern cannot be
explained away as due to confusion or
misunderstood instructions.
Lezak et al., 2004, p. 776
7Effort, Motivation, Response Styles
Frederick et al., 2000
8Researching Malingering
- Case Studies
- Examine test data from individual cases, looking
for performance levels below chance on
forced-choice tests. - Simulation Studies
- May involve comparisons of 4 groups
- 1) Normals faking impairment 3) Normals
responding honestly - 2) Patients responding honestly 4) Patients
faking impairment - Known-Group Designs
- Establish criterion groups (e.g., patients,
malingerers), and conduct a systematic analysis
of similarities and differences between groups - Differential Prevalence Designs
- Compare groups known to be higher in malingering
to those who are not
9Sample Malingering Test
- What about the roles of perceived difficulty,
face validity, or test modality?
10Test Popularity Among Experts
- Forced-choice testing
- Digit Recognition
- Digit Memory Test (DMT)
- Portland Digit Recognition Test (PDRT)
- Victoria Symptom Validity Test (VSVT)
- Computerized Assessment of Response Bias (CARB)
- Word Recognition
- 21-Item Test
- Word Memory Test (WMT)
- Verbal Nonverbal Abilities
- Validity Indicator Profile (VIP)
- Forced-choice testing
- Visual Recognition
- Test of Memory Malingering (TOMM)
- Letter Memory Test
- 48-Pictures Test
- Simplistic tests
- Rey 15-Item Test
- Dot counting Test
- The b Test
- Always/Often Used gt 40
- Always/Often Used 30-39
- Always/Often Used 20-29
- Always/Often Used 10-19
Slick et al., 2004
11Test Sensitivity
- Forced-choice testing
- Digit Recognition
- Digit Memory Test (DMT)
- Portland Digit Recognition Test (PDRT)
- Victoria Symptom Validity Test (VSVT)
- Computerized Assessment of Response Bias (CARB)
- Word Recognition
- 21-Item Test
- Word Memory Test (WMT)
- Verbal Nonverbal Abilities
- Validity Indicator Profile (VIP)
- Forced-choice testing
- Visual Recognition
- Test of Memory Malingering (TOMM)
- Letter Memory Test
- 48-Pictures Test
- Simplistic tests
- Rey 15-Item Test
- Dot counting Test
- The b Test
- Sensitivity gt 85
- Sensitivity 70 84
- Sensitivity 50 69
- Sensitivity lt 49
Sensitivity of malingerers correctly
classified
Lezak et al., 2004, Vickery et al., 2001
12Test Specificity
- Forced-choice testing
- Digit Recognition
- Digit Memory Test (DMT)
- Portland Digit Recognition Test (PDRT)
- Victoria Symptom Validity Test (VSVT)
- Computerized Assessment of Response Bias (CARB)
- Word Recognition
- 21-Item Test
- Word Memory Test (WMT)
- Verbal Nonverbal Abilities
- Validity Indicator Profile (VIP)
- Forced-choice testing
- Visual Recognition
- Test of Memory Malingering (TOMM)
- Letter Memory Test
- 48-Pictures Test
- Simplistic tests
- Rey 15-Item Test
- Dot counting Test
- The b Test
- Specificity gt 85
- Specificity 70 84
- Specificity 50 69
- Specificity lt 49
Specificity of non-malingerers correctly
classified
Lezak et al., 2004, Vickery et al., 2001
13Malingering Patterns in N? Tests
- Pattern Analysis
- WMS-R
- Malingerers Attention/Concentration lt General
Memory - Opposite pattern to typical head injury
- WAIS-R Digit Span
- Malingerers Low digit span performance (ss lt 4)
- Reliable Digit Span (sum of longest correct span
for both trials lt 7) - Vocabulary Digit Span (low digit span while
vocabulary is high) - CVLT
- Malingerers Low recognition (hits
forced-choice) - Cutoff scores for recall trials produce variable
false-positive rates
Iverson Binder, 2000 Larrabee, 2005
14Malingering Patterns in N? Tests
- Pattern Analysis
- Word Memory Test
- Malingerers Inconsistent responding, poor
initial recognition - Pattern should reflect severity of impairments
- Category Test
- Malingerers Poor performance on first 2 subtests
- Wisconsin Card Sorting Task
- Malingerers Poor ratios of categories completed
compared to both perseverative errors and failure
to maintain set - Motor Functioning
- Malingerers Suppress motor functioning to
extreme levels - Motor decline should only be associated with
severe brain injury
Iverson Binder, 2000 Larrabee, 2005
15Symptom Exaggeration
- Self-Report of Symptoms
- May be exaggerated due to other variables
(depression, pain, stress) - e.g., Post-Concussive Syndrome persisting for
more than 3 months - MMPI-2
- Malingerers tend to show elevations in clinical
scales 1, 2, 3, 7, and 8, the Fake Bad Scale
(FBS), VRIN, TRIN, the Infrequency-Psychopathology
Scale F(p). - The F Scale and F K does not appear to be as
sensitive, and therefore valid profiles may be
obtained. - Caution should be given to interpreting the
clinical scales and F Scale derivatives, as these
can be easily influenced by psychiatric
comorbidities.
Iverson Binder, 2000 Larrabee, 2005
16Summary Conclusions
- Defining Malingering
- External reward, negative response bias, and
discrepancies in N? data and/or self-report - Combination of effort and motivation
- Case studies, simulation studies, known-group
designs, differential prevalence designs - Detection of Malingering
- Numerous symptom validity tests
- Most forced-choice tests demonstrate excellent
specificity, but not all show high sensitivity - Pattern analysis of N? data
- Symptom exaggeration
17References
- Frederick, R.I., Crosby, R.D., Wynkoop, T.F.
(2000). Performance curve classification on
invalid responding on the Validity Indicator
Profile. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology,
15, 281-300. - Iverson, G.L., Binder, L.M. (2000). Detecting
exaggeration and malingering in
neuropsychological assessment. Journal of Head
Trauma and Rehabilitation, 15, 829-858. - Larrabee, G.J. (2005). Forensic
Neuropsychology A Scientific Approach. New
York Oxford University Press. - Lezak, M.D., Howieson, D.B., Loring, D.W.
(2004). Neuropsychological Assessment (4th ed.).
New York Oxford University Press. - Slick, D.J., Sherman, E.M.S., Iverson, G.L.
(1999). Diagnostic criteria for malingered
neurocognitive dysfunction Proposed standards
for clinical practice and research. The Clinical
Neuropsychologist, 13, 545-561. - Slick, D.J., Tan, J.E., Strauss, E.H., Hultsch,
D.F. (2004). Detecting malingering a survey of
experts practices. Archives of Clinical
Neuropsychology, 19, 465-473. - Vickery, C.D., Berry, D.T., Inman, T.H., Harris,
M.J., Orey, S.A. (2001). Detection of
inadequate effort on neuropsychological testing
a meta-analytic review of selected procedures.
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