Abstract
The measurement of effort and performance validity is essential for computerized testing where less direct supervision is needed. The clinical validation of an Automated Neuropsychological Metrics-Performance Validity Index (ANAM-PVI) was examined by converting ANAM test scores into a common metric based on their relative infrequency in an outpatient clinic sample with presumed good effort. Optimal ANAM-PVI cut-pointswere determined using receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve analyses and an a priori specificity of 90%. Sensitivity/specificity was examined in available validation samples (controls, simulators, and neurorehabilitation patients). ANAM-PVI scores differed between groups with simulators scoring the highest. ROC curve analysis indicated excellent discriminability of ANAM-PVI scores ≥5 to detect simulators versus controls (area under the curve =0.858; odds ratio for detecting suboptimal performance =15.6), but resulted in a 27% falsepositive rate in the clinical sample. When specificity in the clinical sample was set at 90%, sensitivity decreased (68%), but was consistent with other embedded effort measures. Results support the ANAM-PVI as an embedded effort measure and demonstrate the value of samplespecific cut-points in groups with cognitive impairment. Examination of different cut-points indicates that clinicians should choose samplespecific cut-points based on sensitivity and specificity rates that are most appropriate for their patient population with higher cut-points for those expected to have severe cognitive impairment (e.g., dementia or severe acquired brain injury). © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
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Roebuck-Spencer, T. M., Vincent, A. S., Gilliland, K., Johnson, D. R., & Cooper, D. B. (2013). Initial clinical validation of an embedded performance validity measure within the Automated Neuropsychological Metrics (ANAM). Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 28(7), 700–710. https://doi.org/10.1093/arclin/act055
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