All Stories

  1. Unreliable Block Span Reveals Simulated Intellectual Disability on the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales-Fifth Edition
  2. Need for cognition is related to higher general intelligence, fluid intelligence, and crystallized intelligence, but not working memory
  3. Delusional Parasitosis as a Presenting Feature of HIV Dementia: A Case Study
  4. A Psychometric Evaluation of the STAI-Y, BDI-II, and PAI Using Single and Multifactorial Models in Young Adults Seeking Psychoeducational Evaluation
  5. Using the NAART to Estimate WRAT-4 Reading Grade Level in a Predominantly African American Sample
  6. “Why Is This So Hard?” A Review of Detection of Malingered ADHD in College Students
  7. College students’ conceptualizations of deficits involved in mild intellectual disability
  8. Noncredible Performance in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
  9. Evaluation of Embedded Malingering Indices in a Non-Litigating Clinical Sample using Control, Clinical, and Derived Groups
  10. Development and Validation of the Stanford Binet-5 Rarely Missed Items-Nonverbal Index for the Detection of Malingered Mental Retardation
  11. Neuropsychological Concerns
  12. The relationships of working memory, secondary memory, and general fluid intelligence: Working memory is special.
  13. Ecological Validity
  14. Can we improve the clinical assessment of working memory? An evaluation of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale–Third Edition using a working memory criterion construct
  15. Ability of College Students to Simulate ADHD on Objective Measures of Attention
  16. A comparison of laboratory and clinical working memory tests and their prediction of fluid intelligence
  17. The Vulnerability to Coaching across Measures of Effort
  18. The Wender Utah Rating Scale
  19. The relation of depression and anxiety to measures of attention in young adults seeking psychoeducational evaluation
  20. Continuous Performance Test (CPT) of College Students With ADHD, Psychiatric Disorders, Cognitive Deficits, or No Diagnosis
  21. The conviction of delusional beliefs scale: Reliability and validity
  22. Complex partial seizure symptom endorsement in individuals with a history of head injury
  23. Information processing following mild head injury
  24. A Review of Internet Sites Regarding Independent Medical Examinations: Implications for Clinical Neuropsychological Practitioners
  25. An Examination of the Retrospective Recall of Psychological Distress
  26. Conviction of Delusional Beliefs Scale
  27. Laboratory versus psychometric assessment of working memory: Are we measuring the same thing?
  28. Detecting simulated memory impairment: Further validation of the Word Completion Memory Test (WCMT)
  29. Utility of the UFOV Test With Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
  30. Informed consent in schizophrenia: the use of cues in the assessment of understanding
  31. Erratum to ?Neuropsychological and emotional changes during simulated microgravity: effects of triiodothyronine, alendronate, and testosterone?6Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 2004, 19, 153?1639
  32. Sensation Seeking and Risk Behaviors in Young Adults With and Without a History of Head Injury
  33. Neuropsychological and emotional changes during simulated microgravity: effects of triiodothyronine, alendronate, and testosterone
  34. The Role of Attention in Affect Perception: An Examination of Mirsky's Four Factor Model of Attention in Chronic Schizophrenia
  35. Patterns of discrimination in hiring job applicants with disabilities: The role of disability type, job complexity, and public contact.
  36. The Recognition Memory Test Examination of ethnic differences and norm validity
  37. Neuropsychological Sequelae of Chronic Recreational Gasoline Inhalation
  38. Partial cross-validation of the Wechsler Memory Scale--Revised (WMS-R) General Memory--Attention/Concentration Malingering Index in a nonlitigating sample
  39. Computer-Related Anxiety: Examining the Impact of Technology-Specific Affect on the Performance of a Computerized Neuropsychological Assessment Measure
  40. The role of temporal lobe and orbitofrontal cortices in olfactory memory function
  41. Channels of Communication and Related Factors Influencing the Perception of Meaning, Value, and Emotion
  42. Misconceptions, Discrimination, and Disabling Language: Synthesis and Review
  43. Watch What You Say and How You Say It: Differential Response to Speech by Participants With and Without Head Injuries
  44. The role of attention in affect perception: an examination of Mirsky's four-factor model of attention in chronic schizophrenia
  45. Announcement
  46. Influence of Social Context on Reported Attitudes of Nondisabled Students Toward Students with Disabilities
  47. Stress as a Diagnostic Challenge for Postconcussive Symptoms: Sequelae of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury or Physiological Stress Response
  48. Prospective remembering in younger and older adults: Role of the prospective cue
  49. Stability of Postconcussion Symptomatology Differs Between High and Low Responders and by Gender but not by Mild Head Injury Status
  50. On the Duration of Spatial Fluency Measures
  51. Ethylene dichloride: neuropsychological effects of chronic exposure
  52. Quantitative PET Scan Findings in Carbon Monoxide Poisoning: Deficits Seen in a Matched Pair
  53. Analysis of attention in individuals with history of migraine
  54. Neuropsychological decline following herpes zoster without encephalitis: A case study
  55. Cultural and ethnic influences on recognition memory test performance
  56. External Validation of the Equivalence of Two Computational Formulas for a WAIS-R Seven-Subtest Short Form
  57. Cross-Validation of the Two- and Three-Subtest Short Forms of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised
  58. Chronic neuropsychological effects of long-term mercury exposure: A longitudinal study
  59. Exploratory analysis of Conners-Wells self-report scale for identification of ADHD in a college population
  60. Spatial fluency: Unique designs and perseverative errors as a function of time
  61. The ubiquitous nature of postconcussive symptomatology
  62. Neuropsychological and emotional changes during simulated space flight and microgravity with countermeasures
  63. Neuropsychological and emotional changes during simulated space flight and microgravity with countermeasures
  64. Watch what you say and how you say it. Differential response to speech by head-injured and non-head-injured participants
  65. Psychometric data predict behavior in incarcerated female juvenile offenders better than offense-related information
  66. Anxiety and neuropsychological test performance Schrager, D. A., Morris, D. L., & Gouvier, W. D.
  67. Anxiety and neuropsychological test performance
  68. Public knowledge and misconceptions about electroconvulsive therapy Santa Maria, M. P., Baumeister, A. A., Garrot, J. R., & Gouvier, W. D.
  69. Psychological and neuropsychological effects of accidental exposure to mustard gas in the industrial workplace Gouvier, W. D., Pinkston, J. B., Davis, R. D., & Rostow, C. D.
  70. Predictors of ANS sympathetic activity and intensity in a large scale MHI population: Online neuropsychology project II Browndyke, J. N., Gouvier, W. D., & Waters, W. F.
  71. Test classification failure in mild head injury: A base rate analysis Pinkston, J. B., Gouvier, W. D., & Santa Maria, M. P.
  72. Persistent postconcussional sequelae: Neuropsychological correlates of high and low symptom reporters Ryan, L. M., Gouvier, W. D., & Schrager, D.
  73. Predicting driving ability in Alzheimer's disease O'Jile, J. R., Gouvier, W. D., Todd, M., Santulli, R., Santa Maria, M., Pinkston, J., & Johnson, S.
  74. Detection of tardive Dyskinesia in developmentally disabled individuals Gouvier, W. D., Tucker, K. A., Baglio, C. S., Smith, J. M., Price, C. C., & Matson, J. L.
  75. Validation of the word completion memory test (WCMT) in controls. Coached simulation, and memory-impaired participants Hilsabeck, R. C., O'Bryant, S. E., & Gouvier, W. D.
  76. Public knowledge and misconceptions about electroconvulsive therapy
  77. Psychological and neuropsychological effects of accidental exposure to mustard gas in the industrial workplace
  78. Quantitative PET scan findings in mild head injury: Poor outcome in patients with "normal" testing
  79. Predictors of ANS sympathetic activity and intensity in a large scale MHI population: Online neuropsychology project II
  80. Test classification failure in mild head injury: A base rate analysis
  81. Persistent postconcussional sequelae: Neuropsychological correlates of high and low symptom reporters
  82. Predicting driving ability in Alzheimer's disease
  83. Detection of tardive Dyskinesia in developmentally disabled individuals
  84. Quantitative PET scan findings in mild head injury: Poor outcome in patients with “normal” testing Pinkston, J. B., Varney, N. R., Wu, J. C., & Gouvier, W. D.
  85. Stability of the postconcussive symptom checklist with head-injured and non-head-injured extreme responders Santa Maria, M. P., Pinkston, J. B., Gouvier, W. D., & Miller, S. R.
  86. Stability of the postconcussive symptom checklist with head-injured and non-head-injured extreme responders
  87. Reconstructive Memory Bias in Recall of Neuropsychological Symptomatology
  88. Malingering Detection in a Mentally Retarded Forensic Population
  89. Predictors of postconcussion symptoms in mild head injury
  90. Demand characteristics affect performance in mild head injury research
  91. Quantitative PET scan findings in carbon monoxide poisoning
  92. The effects of mild head injury and postconcussive symptomology on the skin conductance orienting response
  93. Information processing, new learning, and memory in mildly head injured subjects
  94. Online neuropsychology project: A survey of general head injury and prevention knowledge between professionals and non-professionals
  95. Demand characteristics affect performance in mild head injury research
  96. Concurrent validity of a WAIS-R seven-subtest short form: Comparison of weighted and prorated formulas
  97. Convergent and discriminant validity of the memory assessment scales (MAS)
  98. A validation study of the assessment of dissimulation scale using criminal and civilly committed participants
  99. The differential effects of experimentally induced stress on neuropsychological performance of closed head injury subjects who endorse postconcussive symptoms
  100. The Significance of Base Rates, Test Sensitivity, Test Specificity, and Subjects’ Knowledge of Symptoms in Assessing TBI Sequelae and Malingering
  101. Do Tests Predict Malingering in Defendants With Mental Retardation?
  102. Fine Tuning the Graphesthesia Assessment: One Stroke Versus Two
  103. Comparison of list B and list C of the rey auditory verbal learning test
  104. The influence of written disabling, nondisabling, and unaltered disability descriptors on attitudes toward persons with a disability among persons with and without a head injury
  105. A Paradigm of Experimentally Induced Mild Hyperthyroidism: Effects on Nitrogen Balance, Body Composition, and Energy Expenditure in Healthy Young Men1
  106. The effects of minor head injury, postconcussive symptoms, and experimentally induced stress on information processing Hanna-Pladdy, B., Gouvier, W. D., & Bennett, T.
  107. Information processing following mild head injury
  108. The effects of minor head injury, postconcussive symptoms, and experimentally induced stress on information processing
  109. Postconcussional symptoms as predictors of neuropsychological deficits
  110. Malingering detection with the dot counting test
  111. Information processing following mild head injury Betz, B., Ryan, L. M., O'Jile, J. R., Parks-Levy, J., & Gouvier, W. D.
  112. Partial seizure symptomatology: Frequency in a mild head injury population
  113. Postconcussional symptoms as predictors of neuropsychological deficits Hanna-Pladdy, B., Gouvier, W. D., & Berry, Z. M.
  114. Partial seizure symptomatology: Frequency in a mild head injury population Ryan, L. M., O'Jile, J. R., Parks-Levy, J., Betz, B., & Gouvier, W. D.
  115. An evaluation of prosodic and content variations in college students with and without head injuries
  116. Effects of head injury experience on head injury misconceptions
  117. Head injury in a college population: analysis of epidemiological factors
  118. Differential Vulnerability between Postconcussion Self-Report and Objective Malingering Tests in Identifying Simulated Mild Head Injury
  119. Estimation of premorbid intelligence: A combined demographic and psychometric approach
  120. Olfactory and auditory processing in mild head injury: Evaluation of odor identification/memory and dichotic listening
  121. Obsessive-compulsive disorder following neurological insult: Two case examples
  122. The efficacy of the Structured Interview of Reported Symptoms (SIRS) to correctly classify mentally retarded pretrial, not guilty by reason of insanity and malingering defendants
  123. Influence of prior knowledge and experience on the ability to feign mild head injury symptoms in head injured and non-head-injured college students
  124. How important is adaptive functioning in the diagnosis of dementia? A survey of practicing clinical psychologists
  125. Epilepsy Questionnaire
  126. A survey of common misconceptions about epilepsy.
  127. The diagnosis of dementia: A survey of board certified and non-board certified clinical psychologists
  128. Influence of prior knowledge on the ability to feign mild head injury symptoms in head injured and non head injured college students
  129. Prevalence of misconceptions regarding head injury in a college population: The effect of experience with head injury on knowledge of sequellae
  130. Verbal interactions with individuals presenting with and without physical disability.
  131. Effects of sophistication and motivation on the detection of malingered memory performance using a computerized forced-choice task
  132. A survey of common misconceptions about dementia
  133. Group Psychotherapy with Brain-Damaged Adults and Their Families
  134. Postconcussion symptoms and daily stress in normal and head-injured college populations
  135. Evaluation of linguistic variations by college students with and without head injuries.
  136. Rapid visual data analysis in neuropsychological research: Box graphs
  137. A survey of common misconceptions about dementia Gouvier, W.D., Constants, J., Warner, M.S., & Prestholdt, P.H. Louisina State University
  138. A comparison of list B and list C of the Rey auditory verbal learning test Hulse, K.G., Gouvier, W.D., & Savasge R.M. Louisiana State University
  139. Rey auditory-verbal learning test: The effects of age and gender, and norms for delayed recall and story recognition trials
  140. A comparison of list B and list C of the Rey auditory verbal learning test
  141. A recognition trial for the tactual performance test: Analsis of construct validity
  142. Effects of sophistication and motivation on performance using a forced choice memory method for the detection of malingering
  143. A survey of common misconceptions about cerebrovascular accidents and recovery
  144. Postconcussion symptoms and daily stress in normal and head-injured college populations
  145. Effects of sophistication and motivation on performance using a forced choice memory method for the detection of malingering Martin, R.C., Bolter, J.F., Todd, M., & Gouvier, W.D. The Neuromedical Center & Louisiana State University
  146. Primary caregiver distress following severe head injury
  147. Psychometrische voorspelling van de rijvaardigheid bij gehandicapten
  148. Behavioral assessment and treatment of acquired visuoperceptual disorders
  149. Reliability in scoring the tactual performance test: A comparison of expert and novice judgements
  150. Employment discrimination against handicapped job candidates: An analog study of the effects of neurological causation, visibility of handicap, and public contact.
  151. Detecting simulated amnesia Bolter, J. F., Brown, L., & Gouvier, W. D.
  152. Detecting simulated amnesia
  153. Bender Gestalt Screening for Brain Dysfunction in a Forensic Population
  154. Publication counts and scholastic productivity: Comment on Howard, Cole, and Maxwell.
  155. Wheelchair obstacle course performance in right cerebral vascular accident victims
  156. Equivalence of items on the Mini-Mental State
  157. Bender Gestalt screening in a forensic population
  158. Equivalence of items on the mini-mental state
  159. Equivalence of items on the Mini-Mental State
  160. A survey of common misconceptions about head injury and recovery
  161. Base rates of post-concussional symptoms
  162. Head trauma: Educational reintegration
  163. Adult Cognition: Neuropsychological Evidence and Developmental Models
  164. Base rates of post-concussional symptoms
  165. A survey of common misconceptions about head injury and recovery
  166. Reliability and validity of the disability rating scale and the levels of cognitive functioning scale in monitoring recovery from severe head injury
  167. Assessment and Treatment of Cognitive Deficits in Brain-Damaged Individuals
  168. Sex differences in visual information processing following right cerebrovascular accidents
  169. Treatment of Visual Imperception and Related Disorders
  170. Quiet victims of the silent epidemic: A comment on Dlugokinski.
  171. Treatment of Acquired Visuoperceptual and Hemiattentional Disorders
  172. Assessment of drug state dimensionality via drug-drug training and stimulus generalization testing
  173. Stimulus Alternation and the Peak Shift
  174. Testing Imagery and Free Recall: Alternate Forms for Serial Assessment
  175. The Effects of Reinforcement Duration in S2on the Peak Shift
  176. The Effect of S+ and S− Alternation on Stimulus Control and the Peak Shift
  177. The Myer-Megargee Inmate Typology
  178. Delta-9-THC in Pigeons: A Replication and Extension
  179. Stimulus control along a drug-dose dimension
  180. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol induced response suppression in pigeons
  181. Neuropsychological Disorders of Children