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Selected BibliographyGreen, P., Allen, L.M. The differential effects of depressive symptoms on self-report and performance based neurocognitive measures in patients demonstrating good effort during assessment. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology. 1999, 14 (8), 741-742. Green, P., Rohling, M. L., Lees-Haley, P., & Allen, L. (2001). Exaggeration Affects Test Scores Far More Than Severe Brain Injury. Poster presented at the 21st annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in San Francisco, CA. Green, P., Rohling, M. L., Gervais, R. O., Williamson, D. J., & Lees-Haley, P. (October, 2002). Effort Testing is Essential because Effort Has a Greater Effect on Test Scores than Severe Brain Injury. Special topics workshop presented at the 22nd annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Miami, FL. Rohling, M. L., Allen, L. M., & Green, P. (2003). Who Is Exaggerating Cognitive Impairment and Who Is Not? Poster presented at the 33rd annual convention of the International Neuropsychological Society in Honolulu, HI. Rohling, M. L., Green, P., Allen, L., & Williamson, D. J. (2000). Comparisons between a Logistic Regression Formula for the CVLT and the Word Memory Test as Indicators of Suboptimal Performance in a Sample of Litigants. Poster presented at the 20th annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Orlando, FL. Rohling, M. L., Green, P., Allen, L., & Lees-Haley, P. (2000). Effect Sizes of Impairment Associated with Symptom Exaggeration versus Severe TBI: An Analysis of a Sample of 657 Patients and Counting. Poster presented at the 20th annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Orlando, FL. Allen, L.M., & Green, P. (1999). Severe TBI Sample Performance on CARB and the WMT. In 1999 Supplement to CARB '97 and Word Memory Test Manuals. CogniSyst, Inc., Durham, NC. Allen, L.M., Conder, R.L., Green, P., & Cox, D.R. (1997). CARB ‘97 Manual for the Computerized Assessment of Response Bias. CogniSyst, Inc., Durham, NC. Conder, R., Allen, L.M., & Cox, D. (1992). Manual for the Computerized Assessment of Response Bias, CogniSyst, Inc., Durham, N.C. Lees-Haley, P. R., Iverson, G. L, Lange, R. T., Fox, D. D., & Allen, L. M. (2002) Malingering in Forensic Neuropsychology: Daubert and the MMPI-2. Journal of Forensic Neuropsychology, 3(1/2), 167-204. Lees-Haley, P., Green, P., Rohling, M. L., Fox, D., & Allen, L. M. (2003). Commentary on “The lesion(s) in traumatic brain injury: Implications for clinical neuropsychology”. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 18, 574-583. Flaro, L., Green, P., & Robertson, E. (2007). Word Memory Test failure 23 times higher in mild brain brain injury than in parents seeking custody: The power of external incentives. Brain Injury, 21(4), 373-383. Gervais, R., Rohling, M., Green, P., & Ford, W. (2004). A comparison of WMT, CARB, and TOMM failure rates in non-head injury disability claimants. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 19(4), 475-487. Green, P. & Flaro, L. (2003), Word Memory Test performance in children. Child Neuropsychology, 9, 3, 189-207. Journal Articles investigating or using CARB and/or the WMT Green, P., Iverson, G. & Allen, L. (1999). Detecting malingering in head injury litigation with the Word Memory Test. Brain Injury 13(1), 813-819. Validation for the WMT for use in Brain Injury. Green, P., & Iverson, G.L. (2001). Validation of the Computerized Assessment of Response Bias in litigating patients with head injuries. The Clinical Neuropsychologist. 15(4), 492-497. Basic Validation. Green, P., Rohling, M., Lees-Haley, P. & Allen, L. (2001). Effort has a greater effect on test scores than severe brain injury in compensation claimants. Brain Injury 15(12), 1045-1060. Validation for CARB and the WMT with a head injury focus. Demonstrates overgeneralization of exaggeration in several diagnostic groups and provides disturbing data on how poor effort can dramatically affect test scores. Iverson, G., Green P. & Gervais, R. (1999). Using the Word Memory Test to detect biased responding in head injury litigation. Journal of Cognitive Rehabilitation 17(2), 4-8. A clinical study. Described, Discussed or Reviewed: Allen, L. M., Rohling, M. L., & Green, P. (2002). Beyond Symptom Validity: Accounting for Domain-Specific Variance Amid the Ruins of Your Post 9-11 Test Data. Poster presented at the 22nd annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Miami, FL. Allen, L. M., Iverson, G. L., & Green, P. (2002). Computerized Assessment of Response Bias in forensic neuropsychology. Journal of Forensic Neuropsychology., 3(1-2), 205-225. Allen, L. M., Rohling, M. L., & Green, P. (2001). Hierarchical Multiple Regression Analysis of Symptom Validity Failure Using Six Cognitive Domains. Poster presented at the 21st annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in San Francisco, CA. Green, P., Allen, L.M. The differential effects of depressive symptoms on self-report and performance based neurocognitive measures in patients demonstrating good effort during assessment. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology. 1999, 14 (8), 741-742 Green, P., Allen, L.M. III, & Iverson, G.L. Utility of the Memory Complaints Inventory in mild to moderate traumatic brain injury. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology 1999, 14 (8), 743. Green, P., Rohling, M. L., Lees-Haley, P., & Allen, L. (2001). Exaggeration Affects Test Scores Far More Than Severe Brain Injury. Poster presented at the 21st annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in San Francisco, CA. Green, P., Rohling, M. L., Gervais, R. O., Williamson, D. J., & Lees-Haley, P. (October, 2002). Effort Testing is Essential because Effort Has a Greater Effect on Test Scores than Severe Brain Injury. Special topics workshop presented at the 22nd annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Miami, FL. Rohling, M. L., Allen, L. M., & Green, P. (2003). Who Is Exaggerating Cognitive Impairment and Who Is Not? Poster presented at the 33rd annual convention of the International Neuropsychological Society in Honolulu, HI. Rohling, M. L., Green, P., Allen, L., & Williamson, D. J. (2000). Comparisons between a Logistic Regression Formula for the CVLT and the Word Memory Test as Indicators of Suboptimal Performance in a Sample of Litigants. Poster presented at the 20th annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Orlando, FL. Rohling, M. L., Green, P., Allen, L., & Lees-Haley, P. (2000). Effect Sizes of Impairment Associated with Symptom Exaggeration versus Severe TBI: An Analysis of a Sample of 657 Patients and Counting. Poster presented at the 20th annual convention of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in Orlando, FL. Rohling, M. L., & Williamson, D. J. (2001). An Actuarial Approach to Fixed vs. Flexible Batteries: Rohling’s Interpretive Method. Workshop presented at the New Orleans Neuropsychological Society Winter Conference, New Orleans, LA. Allen, L.M., & Green, P. (1999). Severe TBI Sample Performance on CARB and the WMT. In 1999 Supplement to CARB '97 and Word Memory Test Manuals. CogniSyst, Inc., Durham, NC. Allen, L.M., Conder, R.L., Green, P., & Cox, D.R. (1997). CARB ‘97 Manual for the Computerized Assessment of Response Bias. CogniSyst, Inc., Durham, NC. Conder, R., Allen, L.M., & Cox, D. (1992). Manual for the Computerized Assessment of Response Bias, CogniSyst, Inc., Durham, N.C. Lees-Haley, P. R., Iverson, G. L, Lange, R. T., Fox, D. D., & Allen, L. M. (2002) Malingering in Forensic Neuropsychology: Daubert and the MMPI-2. Journal of Forensic Neuropsychology, 3(1/2), 167-204. Lees-Haley, P., Green, P., Rohling, M. L., Fox, D., & Allen, L. M. (2003). Commentary on “The lesion(s) in traumatic brain injury: Implications for clinical neuropsychology”. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 18, 574-583. |
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