Differentiating malingering from genuine cognitive dysfunction using the trail making test-ratio and stroop interference scores

被引:20
作者
Egeland, Jens
Langfjaeran, Tone
机构
[1] Vestfold Mental Hlth Care Trust, Dept Res, N-3103 Tonsberg, Norway
[2] Vestfold Mental Hlth Care Trust, No Vestfold Dist Psychiat Ctr, Tonsberg, Norway
来源
APPLIED NEUROPSYCHOLOGY | 2007年 / 14卷 / 02期
关键词
malingering; stroop; trail making test;
D O I
10.1080/09084280701319953
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Patterns of test performance that are inconsistent with knowledge of brain dysfunction can potentially diffrentiate between malingering and true impairment among litigants with low scores on neuropsychological tests. In this study possible malingerers (11 = 41), impaired (30) or cognitively normal (17) litigants were compared on the Trail Making Test B.-A ratio score and Stroop Interference. The majority of possible malingerers had a low TMT-ratio (< 2.5) and an inverted Stroop effect, whereas the majority of impaired subjects had a high TMT-ratio and specific Stroop interference. Sensitivity to malingering was 61 and 68 percent, and specificity was 57 and 59 percent. This is too low for valid classification of individuals. However, the combination of both measures increases predictability. The clinician is advised to look for other evidence of malingering in cases of simultaneous low TMT-ratio and inverted Stroop. Patients with high TMT-ratio and Stroop interference, should be thoroughly; examined for indications of brain disease.
引用
收藏
页码:113 / 119
页数:7
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   Definite malingered neurocognitive dysfunction in moderate/severe traumatic brain injury [J].
Bianchini, KJ ;
Greve, KW ;
Love, JM .
CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2003, 17 (04) :574-580
[2]  
DELIS DC, 1987, CALIFORNIA VERBAL LE
[3]   Attention profile in schizophrenia compared with depression: differential effects of processing speed, selective attention and vigilance [J].
Egeland, J ;
Rund, BR ;
Sundet, K ;
Landro, NI ;
Asbjornsen, A ;
Lund, A ;
Roness, A ;
Stordal, KI ;
Hugdahl, K .
ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, 2003, 108 (04) :276-284
[4]  
EGELAND J, 2005, TIDSSKRIFT NORSK PSY, V42, P99
[5]  
GOEBEL RA, 1983, J CLIN PSYCHOL, V39, P731, DOI 10.1002/1097-4679(198309)39:5<731::AID-JCLP2270390515>3.0.CO
[6]  
2-T
[7]  
Golden C.J., 1978, MANUAL CLIN EXPT USE
[8]   Performance of compensation seeking and non-compensation seeking samples on the Victoria Symptom Validity Test: Cross-validation and extension of a standardization study [J].
Grote, CL ;
Kooker, EK ;
Garron, DC ;
Nyenhuis, DL ;
Smith, CA ;
Mattingly, ML .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 22 (06) :709-719
[9]   Detecting exaggeration and malingering with the Trail Making Test [J].
Iverson, GL ;
Lange, RT ;
Green, P ;
Franzen, MD .
CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2002, 16 (03) :398-406
[10]   Detecting exaggeration and malingering in neuropsychological assessment [J].
Iverson, GL ;
Binder, LM .
JOURNAL OF HEAD TRAUMA REHABILITATION, 2000, 15 (02) :829-858