Kevin W. Greve, Ph.D.
Research Professor, Associate Chair
(1991, University of Florida)
Failure to recover after injury or illness is a significant health problem that is closely tied to a range of psychosocial factors including personality and coping styles, psychopathology, stress, work satisfaction, and financial factors. For the last 7 years Dr. Greve’s research group has published extensively on the issue of response bias, symptom exaggeration, and malingering, one set of factors associated with poor outcome in a variety of conditions.
Ongoing and future research aims at better understanding the influence of social factors, personality, and psychopathology on outcome following illness or injury. This current focus continues Dr. Greve’s long-time study of psychological and neuropsychological assessment and psychometrics. He also retains his interest in cognitive neuropsychology and the rare cases whose analysis from a cognitive and neuroanatomical perspective can shed new light on the relationship between the brain and behavior.
Research resources include an active research team of Ph.D.-level psychologists, graduate students. Graduate students are actively involved in research from the beginning of their tenure in the Department and most publish every year. Resources also include a large clinical psychology/clinical neuropsychology practice and access to local pain clinics.
Selected Publications
Greve, K. W., Ord, J. S., Bianchini, K. J., & Curtis, K. L. (2009). The prevalence of malingering in chronic pain patients referred for psychological evaluation in a medico-legal context. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, 90, 1117-1126.
Ben-Porath, Y. S., Greve, K. W., Bianchini, K. J., & Kaufmann, P. M. (2009). The MMPI-2 Symptom Validity Scale (FBS) is an Empirically-Validated Measure of Over-reporting in Personal Injury Litigants and Claimants: Reply to Butcher et al. (2008). Psychological Injury and the Law, 1, 62-85.
Greve, K. W., Ord, J., Curtis, K. L., Bianchini, K. J., & Brennan, A. (2008). Detecting malingering in traumatic brain injury and chronic pain: a comparison of three forced-choice symptom validity tests. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 22, 896-918.
Greve, K. W. & Bianchini, K. J. (2007). Detection of Cognitive Malingering with Tests of Executive Function. In G. J. Larrabee (Ed.), Evaluation of Malingering in the Neuropsychological Examination (pp. 171-225). New York: Oxford University Press.
Bianchini, K. J., Curtis, K. L., & Greve, K. W. (2006). Compensation and Malingering in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Dose-Response Relationship? The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 20, 831 - 847.
Bianchini, K. J., Greve, K. W., & Glynn, G. (2005). On the Diagnosis of Malingered Pain-Related Disability: Lessons from Cognitive Malingering Research. The Spine Journal, 5, 404-417.
Greve, K. W., Stickle, T. R., Love, J. M., Bianchini, K. J., & Stanford, M.S. (2005). Latent Structure of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test: A Confirmatory Factor Analytic Study. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 20, 355-364.
Greve, K. W. & Bianchini, K. J. (2004). Setting empirical cut-offs on psychometric indicators of negative response bias: a methodological commentary with recommendations. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 19, 533-541.
Bianchini, K. J., Mathias, C. W., & Greve, K. W. (2001). Symptom Validity Testing: A Critical Review. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 15, 19-45.
Revised 9/8/09
