Contents
List of Contributors xi
Section 1 Introduction
1 Wilful deception as illness behaviour 3
Peter W. Halligan, Christopher Bass, and David A. Oakley
Section 2 Historical, military, and evolutionary origins
2 Malingering: historical perspectives 31
Simon Wessely
3 Malingering, shirking, and self-inflicted injuries in the military 42
Ian P. Palmer
4 Can monkeys malinger? 54
Richard W. Byrne and Emma Stokes
Section 3 Conceptual, methodological, and cultural context
5 Conceptual issues and explanatory models of malingering 71
Richard Rogers and Craig S. Neumann
6 The social cognition of intentional action 83
Bertram F. Malle
7 Malingering and criminal behaviour as psychopathology 93
Adrian Raine
8 Alternatives to four clinical and research traditions in malingering detection 107
David Faust
9 Characteristics of the sick role 122
Lindsay Prior and Fiona Wood
10 The contemporary cultural context for deception and malingering in Britain 132
W. Peter Robinson
Section 4 Illness deception and clinical practice
11 Illness falsification in children: pathways to prevention? 147
Judith A. Libow
12 Distinguishing malingering from psychiatric disorders 156
Michael Sharpe
13 The nature of chronic pain: a clinical and legal challenge 171
Chris J. Main
14 The misadventures of wanderers and victims of trauma 184
Loren Pankratz
15 When the quantity of mercy is strained: US physicians’ deception of insurers for patients 197
Matthew K. Wynia
Section 5 Medicolegal and occupational perspectives
16 Law, lies, and videotape: malingering as a legal phenomenon 209
Michael A. Jones
17 Outcome-related compensation: in search of a new paradigm 220
George Mendelson
18 Malingering and the law: a third way? 232
Alan Sprince
19 How can organizations prevent illness deception among employees? 243
Charles Baron and Jon Poole
Section 6 Contributions from cognitive neuroscience
20 Lying as an executive function 255
Sean Spence, Tom Farrow, David Leung, Samir Shah, Becky Reilly, Anna Rahman, and Amy Herford
21 Differential brain activations for malingered and subjectively ‘real’ paralysis 267
David A. Oakley, Nicholas S. Ward, Peter W. Halligan, and Richard S. J. Frackowiak
Section 7 Disability analysis and insurance medicine
22 Origins, practice, and limitations of Disability Assessment Medicine 287
Mansel Aylward
23 Malingering, insurance medicine, and the medicalization of fraud 301
John LoCascio
Section 8 Deception detection
24 Investigating benefit fraud and illness deception in the United Kingdom 313
Richard Kitchen
25 Neuropsychological tests and techniques that detect malingering 323
Richard I. Frederick
26 Misrepresentation of pain and facial expression 336
Kenneth D. Craig and Marilyn Hill
27 Deceptive responses and detecting deceit 348
Aldert Vrij and Samantha Mann
Index 363