Synonyms
FBS; Symptom exaggeration
Description
As a result of observing a distinct pattern of symptom reporting in personal injury litigants and secondary to the F-family’s limitations, Lees-Haley and colleagues (Lees-Haley et al. 1991; Lees-Haley, 1992) developed the “Fake Bad Scale” (FBS) of the MMPI-2. It was intended to be sensitive to personal injury exaggeration and was constructed on a “rational content basis.” Specifically, the authors utilized unpublished frequency counts of litigant’s MMPI-2 test data and responses that coincided with a model of goal-directed behavior characterized by: (1) appearing honest; (2) appearing psychologically normal, except for the influence of the alleged cause of injury; (3) avoiding admitting preexisting psychopathology; (4) attempting to minimize the impact of previously disclosed preexisting complaints; (5) minimizing or hiding pre-injury antisocial or illegal behavior; and (6) presenting a degree of injury or disability within perceived...
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References and Readings
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Heilbronner, R.L. (2018). Fake Bad Scale. In: Kreutzer, J.S., DeLuca, J., Caplan, B. (eds) Encyclopedia of Clinical Neuropsychology. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-57111-9_831
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-57111-9_831
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