Publication | Closed Access
Pain, Malingering, and Performance on the WAIS-III Processing Speed Index
101
Citations
59
References
2006
Year
Pain MedicineDiagnosisNeuropathic PainCognitionCognitive RehabilitationSocial SciencesPain SyndromeProcessing Speed IndexPain ManagementRadiologyCognitive SciencePsychiatryCognitive VariableNeuroimagingRehabilitationPain ResearchPain PatientsCognitive DysfunctionCognitive FunctioningMedicinePsychopathology
Pain patients often report cognitive symptoms and many will include them in their claims of disability. The Processing Speed Index (PSI) of the WAIS-III was investigated as one aspect of cognitive functioning in six groups. Slight impairment was found for PSI and Digit Symbol subtest performance, but not for Symbol Search, in a Laboratory-induced Pain group and a Clinical Pain group. The lowest scores were found in a Simulator group instructed to fake cognitive impairment and a Clinical Pain group diagnosed as Malingering. Results suggest that PSI scores are only slightly reduced by laboratory-induced pain or chronic pain, and that unexpectedly low scores in the absence of significant/documented brain dysfunction suggest poor effort or deliberate misrepresentation.
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