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Laurence M. Binder

Researcher at Oregon Health & Science University

Publications -  70
Citations -  6038

Laurence M. Binder is an academic researcher from Oregon Health & Science University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neuropsychological test & Malingering. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 70 publications receiving 5741 citations. Previous affiliations of Laurence M. Binder include Veterans Health Administration & Portland VA Medical Center.

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A review of mild head trauma. part I: Meta-analytic review of neuropsychological studies

TL;DR: Clinicians will more likely be correct when not diagnosing brain injury than when diagnosing a brain injury in cases with chronic disability after MHT, a meta-analytic review of neuropsychological studies of mild head trauma suggests.
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Money matters: a meta-analytic review of the effects of financial incentives on recovery after closed-head injury.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the impact of financial incentives on disability, symptoms, and objective findings after closed-head injury and found that the effect was particularly strong for mild head trauma.
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Persisting symptoms after mild head injury: a review of the postconcussive syndrome.

TL;DR: Neuropsychological, neurophysiological, and neuropathological evidence that brain damage can occur in the absence of gross neurological deficits after mild injuries is reviewed.
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To Err is Human: “Abnormal” Neuropsychological Scores and Variability are Common in Healthy Adults

TL;DR: It is concluded that abnormal performance on some proportion of neuropsychological tests in a battery is psychometrically normal, and that test battery developers provide data on the amount of variability in normal samples and also provide base rate tables with false positive rates that can be used clinically when interpreting test performance.
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Assessment of malingering after mild head trauma with the portland digit recognition test

TL;DR: The Portland Digit Recognition Test (PDRT), a forced-choice measure of recognition memory designed for the purpose of assessing the possibility of malingering, was administered to two groups of clinically referred patients seeking financial compensation for injuries and also to a third group with brain dysfunction not seeking compensation.