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1.
Psychol Inj Law ; 15(2): 116-127, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34849185

ABSTRACT

In 2013, a special issue of the Spanish journal Clínica y Salud published a review on symptom and performance validity assessment in European countries (Merten et al. in Clínica y Salud, 24(3), 129-138, 2013). At that time, developments were judged to be in their infancy in many countries, with major publication activities stemming from only four countries: Spain, The Netherlands, Great Britain, and Germany. As an introduction to a special issue of Psychological Injury and Law, this is an updated report of developments during the last 10 years. In that period of time, research activities have reached a level where it is difficult to follow all developments; some validity measures were newly developed, others were adapted for European languages, and validity assessment has found a much stronger place in real-world evaluation contexts. Next to an update from the four nations mentioned above, reports are now given from Austria, Italy, and Switzerland, too.

2.
Waste Manag ; 78: 490-496, 2018 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32559937

ABSTRACT

Illegal dumping of waste on kerbsides outside residences is a problem in many urban areas around the world. Despite this, there has been little research undertaken on the reasons behind the practice or the barriers to alternative, legal disposal mechanisms. This study interviewed householders in Brisbane, Australia in an attempt to fill this gap. The interviews revealed that kerbside dumping is a complex behaviour with a variety of motivations. Unlike many other illegal activities, participants and observers of kerbside dumping did not necessarily realise that what they were doing was illegal. They also identified many positive benefits such as sharing items with other people. In addition, some residents felt they had no choice even though they were aware that it was illegal. For them, barriers such as lack of transport to the waste disposal facility and lack of storage until the official kerbside collection meant that the practice continued.

3.
J Neuropsychol ; 8(2): 216-30, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23679892

ABSTRACT

The specificity of the Word Memory Test (WMT) effort indices was examined in 48 individuals with minimal to mild head injury (MHI) in the acute stages post-injury. None of the individuals was involved in litigation or disability claims. At the established cut-offs, the WMT had an unacceptable false-positive rate (18%). T test analysis was also carried out for WMT passers and failures on a battery of neuropsychometric measures and across a range of demographic variables. The WMT was performed at a significantly lower level on the Wechsler Memory Scale-III word list sub-tests and verbal fluency tests (p < .05). This suggests that WMT failure may be indicative of a specific deficit in verbal processing in the acute phase of MHI.


Subject(s)
Craniocerebral Trauma/complications , Malingering/diagnosis , Memory Disorders/diagnosis , Memory Disorders/etiology , Neuropsychological Tests , Vocabulary , Adult , Craniocerebral Trauma/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Male , Malingering/psychology , Middle Aged , Pilot Projects , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Sensitivity and Specificity , United Kingdom/epidemiology , Verbal Learning/physiology , Young Adult
4.
Clín. salud ; 24(3): 129-138, nov. 2013. ilus
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-117618

ABSTRACT

In the past, the practice of symptom validity assessment (SVA) in European countries was considerably lagging behind developments in North America, with the topic of malingering being largely taboo for psychological and medical professionals. This was being changed in the course of the past decade with a growing interest in methods for the assessment of negative response bias. European estimates of suboptimal test performance in civil and social forensic contexts point at base rates similar to those obtained in North America. Symptom over-reporting and underperformance in neuropsychological examinations appear to occur in a sizable proportion of patients. Although there is considerable progress in establishing SVA as an integral and indispensable part of psychological and neuropsychological assessment in some countries, others appear to lag behind. In some countries there is still enormous resistance against SVA from part of the neuropsychological and psychiatric communities (AU)


Hasta no hace mucho tiempo la evaluación de la validez de los síntomas en Europa, tanto en su vertiente científico-académica como en la práctica profesional, estaba muy por detrás de los avances que se producían en Norteamérica y particularmente la simulación se consideraba un tema tabú entre los profesionales de la Psicología y la Medicina. En la última década las cosas parecen haber cambiado, observándose un incremento en el interés por la evaluación del sesgo de respuesta negativo. Las tasas base de prevalencia obtenidas utilizando pruebas de rendimiento subóptimo en contextos civiles y forenses son similares a las obtenidas en Norteamérica. Los fenómenos de exageración de síntomas en autoinformes y rendimiento insuficiente en pruebas neuropsicológicas parecen ocurrir en semejante proporción de pacientes. Aunque se han producido avances notables en el establecimiento de la evaluación de la validez de los síntomas como una parte integral e indispensable de la evaluación psicológica y neuropsicológica en algunos países europeos, en otros sin embargo la situación es mucho más incipiente. De hecho, en algunos países sigue existiendo una gran resistencia a la evaluación de la validez de los síntomas proveniente de algunos profesionales de la psiquiatría y la neuropsicología (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Neuropsychological Tests , Symptom Assessment/methods , Malingering/epidemiology , Risk Factors , Psychological Tests , Sensitivity and Specificity
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