TY - JOUR
T1 - Establishing supplementary response time validity indicators in the Word Memory Test (WMT) and directions for future research
AU - Elbaum, Tomer
AU - Golan, Lior
AU - Lupu, Tamar
AU - Wagner, Michael
AU - Braw, Yoram
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2020/9/2
Y1 - 2020/9/2
N2 - Response time (RT) measures in the Word Memory Test (WMT) offer to complement information derived from conventional accuracy measures. The current study aimed to validate the findings of Lupu, Elbaum, Wagner, and Braw in which RT variability was assessed, for the first time, in the WMT. A secondary aim was to suggest directions for the future research of RT measures in Forced-Choice Recognition Memory Performance Validity Tests (FCRM-PVTs). The study utilized a simulation research design, with participants performing the WMT’s immediate recognition (IR) subtest (N = 59). Mean RTs and a scale which combines accuracy and RT measures, but not variability in RTs, possessed adequate discrimination capacity. Enhanced discrimination capacity was found after discarding the first items’ RTs, though the IR-subtest‘s accuracy measure still showed superiority as a stand-alone validity indicator. The promise of RT measures may, therefore, lie in their ability to illuminate speed-accuracy tradeoffs among examinees with border-zone accuracy scores in FCRM-PVTs. They should, therefore, be regarded as complementary to conventional accuracy measures.
AB - Response time (RT) measures in the Word Memory Test (WMT) offer to complement information derived from conventional accuracy measures. The current study aimed to validate the findings of Lupu, Elbaum, Wagner, and Braw in which RT variability was assessed, for the first time, in the WMT. A secondary aim was to suggest directions for the future research of RT measures in Forced-Choice Recognition Memory Performance Validity Tests (FCRM-PVTs). The study utilized a simulation research design, with participants performing the WMT’s immediate recognition (IR) subtest (N = 59). Mean RTs and a scale which combines accuracy and RT measures, but not variability in RTs, possessed adequate discrimination capacity. Enhanced discrimination capacity was found after discarding the first items’ RTs, though the IR-subtest‘s accuracy measure still showed superiority as a stand-alone validity indicator. The promise of RT measures may, therefore, lie in their ability to illuminate speed-accuracy tradeoffs among examinees with border-zone accuracy scores in FCRM-PVTs. They should, therefore, be regarded as complementary to conventional accuracy measures.
KW - Feigned cognitive impairment
KW - Performance Validity Test (PVT)
KW - Word Memory Test (WMT)
KW - malingering
KW - response time
KW - simulation
KW - validation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85061320510&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/23279095.2018.1555161
DO - 10.1080/23279095.2018.1555161
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C2 - 30724595
AN - SCOPUS:85061320510
SN - 2327-9095
VL - 27
SP - 403
EP - 413
JO - Applied neuropsychology. Adult
JF - Applied neuropsychology. Adult
IS - 5
ER -