Author/Authors :
White، Roberta F. نويسنده , , Proctor، Susan P. نويسنده , , Heeren، Timothy نويسنده , , Krengel، Maxine نويسنده , , Lindem، Karen نويسنده , , Vasterling، Jennifer نويسنده , , Sutker، Patricia B. نويسنده , , Wolfe، Jessica نويسنده , , Keane، Terence M. نويسنده , , Kirkley، Shalene نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Assuming that the underlying etiology of unexplained health-related symptoms in returning Gulf War (GW) veterans is multifactorial, the possible role of feigning or exaggeration of symptoms is worth consideration as a contributing factor. The present study assessed the relationship between motivation to perform well during neuropsychological assessment and objective neuropsychological test performance. Motivation was measured as the score on a visual memory task (Test of Memory Malingering, TOMM) of low difficulty. Participants included 77 veterans from the cohorts of GW- (n = 58) and Germany-deployed (n = 19) GW-era veterans described in two other papers in this issue who were administered the TOMM. Most veterans earned perfect or near-perfect scores on the TOMM (48–50/50). Scores <47 were associated with lower scores on neuropsychological tasks assessing attention, executive functions, and memory. Variability in test performance within and between tasks measuring similar functions was also found in participants with lower TOMM scores.
Keywords :
malingering , Gulf War syndrome , Motivation , neuropsychological tests