What a tangled web we weave: Discriminating between malingering and anosmia

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Abstract

Two groups of normosmic subjects were instructed to feign a total olfactory loss when tested with the Olfactory Confusion Matrix (OCM). One of the groups was given specific instructions as to the number of odorants and trials in the test, as well as the number of items that might be expected to be correctly identified by chance. The responses of both groups of malingers were compared with responses gathered frorm a group of anosmic patients. The groups did not differ in terms of performance level (percent correct). In spite of the similarity in terms of accuracy level, an analysis of the pattern of OCM responses to an irritant allowed the anosmic patients to be distinguished from subjects attempting to feign a loss. Subjects were given explicit details about the test performed at the same level as those simply told to feign a loss. These results suggest that the OCM is an effective tool in separating malingering from anosmia.

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Kurtz, D. B., White, T. L., Hornung, D. E., & Belknap, E. (1999). What a tangled web we weave: Discriminating between malingering and anosmia. Chemical Senses, 24(6), 697–700. https://doi.org/10.1093/chemse/24.6.697

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