RT Article T1 Verify the scene, report the symptoms: testing the Verifiability Approach and SRSI in the detection of fabricated PTSD claims JF Legal and criminological psychology VO 24 IS 2 SP 241 OP 257 A1 Boskovic, Irena A1 Dibbets, Pauline A1 Bogaard, Glynis A1 Hope, Lorraine A1 Jelicic, Marko A1 Orthey, Robin A2 Dibbets, Pauline A2 Bogaard, Glynis A2 Hope, Lorraine A2 Jelicic, Marko A2 Orthey, Robin LA English YR 2019 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1846212588 AB Purpose. In order to effectively feign post-traumatic stress disorder, a person needs to confabulate an exposure narrative and to fabricate symptoms of high distress. The Verifiability Approach (VA) is a lie-detection method based on the notion that truth tellers’ narratives include more verifiable (checkable) information than liars’ narratives. The Self-Report Symptom Inventory (SRSI) is a measure of over-reporting, and it includes genuine symptoms and pseudosymptoms that are likely to be endorsed in fabricated symptom reports. In this study, we examined whether the VA can help discriminate the fabricated exposure narratives, and whether the SRSI can aid screening for symptom over-reporting. Method. One group of participants (truth tellers) witnessed a vehicle crash scene using the Virtual Reality paradigm (n = 22), while the other group (feigners) was instructed to fabricate such an experience (n = 46). All the participants wrote the exposure narratives and completed the SRSI. Results. Feigners produced non-verifiable (vague) and lengthier narratives than truth tellers, who reported a higher proportion of checkable information. Regarding the symptom reports, feigners endorsed more of trauma-related genuine symptoms and pseudosymptoms than truth tellers. Conclusion. The non-verifiable details and the proportion of verifiable details, together with the SRSI subscales, can assist explaining the reporting strategies of those feigning negative exposures. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 253-256 NO Gesehen am 25.05.2023 NO First published: 18 February 2019 K1 feigning K1 Narrative K1 PTSD K1 symptom reports K1 verifiability DO 10.1111/lcrp.12149