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Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology (SIMS) References(sims)/Andrikopoulos, J., & Greiffenstein, M. F. (2012). Something to talk about? The status of post-traumatic stress disorder in clinical neuropsychology. In G. J. Larrabee & G. J. Larrabee? (Ed) (Eds.), Forensic neuropsychology: A scientific approach. (pp. 365–400). Retrieved from élémy, R., Lenne, B., Hautecoeur, P., & Antoine, P. (2014). Simulation des troubles cognitifs: Aspects conceptuels et méthogdologiques. [Cognitive disorders malingering: Conceptual and methodological aspects.]. Revue de Neuropsychologie, Neurosciences Cognitives et Cliniques, 6(2), 110–116. , J. F., Wisdom, N. M., Collins, R. L., Franks, R., LeMaire, A., & Chen, D. K. (2012). Diagnostic utility of the Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology for identifying psychogenic non-epileptic events. Epilepsy & Behavior, Vol. 24, pp. 439–444. , K. B. (2013). Clinical practice of forensic neuropsychology: An evidence-based approach. 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In Clinical assessment of malingering and deception, 4th ed. (pp. 61–80). New York,? NY,? US: The Guilford Press.Dandachi-FitzGerald, B., & Merckelbach, H. (2013). Feigning ≠ feigning a memory deficit: The Medical Symptom Validity Test as an example. Journal of Experimental Psychopathology, 4(1), 46–63. , B., Merckelbach, H., & Ponds, R. W. H. M. (2017). Neuropsychologists’ ability to predict distorted symptom presentation. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, Vol. 39, pp. 257–264. , B., Ponds, R. W. H. M., & Merten, T. (2013). Symptom validity and neuropsychological assessment: A survey of practices and beliefs of neuropsychologists in six European countries. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 28(8), 771–783. , B., Ponds, R. W. H. M., Peters, M. J. V, & Merckelbach, H. (2011). Cognitive underperformance and symptom over-reporting in a mixed psychiatric sample. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, Vol. 25, pp. 812–828. , R. L. (2012). 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