Private Practice, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Arch Clin Neuropsychol. 2020 Aug 28;35(6):735-764. doi: 10.1093/arclin/acaa019.
Empirically informed neuropsychological opinion is critical for determining whether cognitive deficits and symptoms are legitimate, particularly in settings where there are significant external incentives for successful malingering. The Slick, Sherman, and Iversion (1999) criteria for malingered neurocognitive dysfunction (MND) are considered a major milestone in the field's operationalization of neurocognitive malingering and have strongly influenced the development of malingering detection methods, including serving as the criterion of malingering in the validation of several performance validity tests (PVTs) and symptom validity tests (SVTs) (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(4), 545-561). However, the MND criteria are long overdue for revision to address advances in malingering research and to address limitations identified by experts in the field.
The MND criteria were critically reviewed, updated with reference to research on malingering, and expanded to address other forms of malingering pertinent to neuropsychological evaluation such as exaggeration of self-reported somatic and psychiatric symptoms.
The new proposed criteria simplify diagnostic categories, expand and clarify external incentives, more clearly define the role of compelling inconsistencies, address issues concerning PVTs and SVTs (i.e., number administered, false positives, and redundancy), better define the role of SVTs and of marked discrepancies indicative of malingering, and most importantly, clearly define exclusionary criteria based on the last two decades of research on malingering in neuropsychology. Lastly, the new criteria provide specifiers to better describe clinical presentations for use in neuropsychological assessment.
The proposed multidimensional malingering criteria that define cognitive, somatic, and psychiatric malingering for use in neuropsychological assessment are presented.
经验主义的神经心理学意见对于确定认知缺陷和症状是否真实至关重要,尤其是在存在成功伪装的重大外部激励的情况下。Slick、Sherman 和 Iversion(1999 年)制定的伪装认知功能障碍(MND)标准被认为是该领域对认知伪装进行操作化的一个主要里程碑,并强烈影响了伪装检测方法的发展,包括作为几种表现有效性测试(PVTs)和症状有效性测试(SVTs)验证中的伪装标准(Slick,D.J.,Sherman,E.M.S.,和 Iverson,G.L.(1999 年)。伪装性神经认知功能障碍的诊断标准:临床实践和研究的建议标准。临床神经心理学家,13(4),545-561)。然而,MND 标准早就需要修订,以解决伪装研究的进展,并解决该领域专家确定的限制。
批判性地审查了 MND 标准,参考了伪装研究的研究结果进行了更新,并扩展到解决与神经心理评估相关的其他形式的伪装,例如夸大自我报告的躯体和精神症状。
新提出的标准简化了诊断类别,扩大并澄清了外部激励,更清楚地定义了强制性不一致的作用,解决了与 PVTs 和 SVTs 相关的问题(即,管理数量,假阳性和冗余),更好地定义了 SVTs 和表明伪装的明显差异的作用,最重要的是,根据过去二十年的神经心理学伪装研究,明确界定了排除标准。最后,新的标准提供了专门术语,以便更好地描述神经心理评估中的临床表现。
提出了用于神经心理评估的认知、躯体和精神伪装的多维伪装标准。