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Psychological Journal Articles

Sometimes when people search for "psychological journal articles" they are students trying to find such articles for a class assignment. If that's you, this page has some information that might be of interest to you, but, in general if you don't have access to a professional research article database here are the best ways to find psychological journal articles:

Sidebar: If you're looking for the list of Psychological Injury and Law journal articles, here are jump links: Volume 1 - 2008 | Volume 2 - 2009 | Volume 3 - 2010 | Volume 4 - 2011

Here are the tips for students:

1. Search Google Scholar for the topics that interest you. The results will show you both psychological journal articles (published in peer-reviewed journals) and books (or book chapters).

2. Search PubMed for your topics. Although PubMed focuses on the biomedical literature, it contains many psychological journal articles as well. Be sure to read the PubMed Quick Start Guide.

3. Ask the reference librarian at your college or university (or high school) for assistance. They are pros at finding information and teaching you how to find psychological journal articles on your own. You'll save a ton of time over your academic career with just a few minutes of advice from a good reference librarian.

Psychological Injury and Law - Article List

If you are interested in the area of psychological injury and law--which is the focus of this website--here is a list of psychological journal articles from our flagship publication, Psychological Injury and Law:

Volume 1

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 1, Number 1 / April 2008

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial Introducing a Journal and an Association by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: Introduction to the First Issue by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: Assumptions and Foundations, Controversies and Myths, Needed Directions by Gerald Young

Expert Testimony on Psychological Injury: Procedural and Evidentiary Issues by Michael Finch, Catherine Guthrie and Carol Henderson

Forensic Psychology, Psychological Injuries and the Law by Andrew W. Kane

Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 1, Number 2 / June 2008

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial on the Young and the Tested by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: Defining a Field by Gerald Young

Disentangling the Disability Quagmire in Psychological Injury: Part 1—Disability and Return to Work: Theories, Methods, and Applications by Izabela Z. Schultz

Disentangling the Disability Quagmire in Psychological Injury and Law, Part 2: Evolution of Disability Models: Conceptual, Methodological and Forensic Practice Issues by Izabela Z. Schultz and Alison M. Stewart

Forensic Neuropsychology and Mild Traumatic Brain Injury by Ronald M. Ruff and Christina Weyer Jamora

The Psychological Impact of Traumatic Events on Children by Emma Salter and Paul Stallard

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 1, Number 3 / September 2008

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial on Truth and Consequences, Psychologists and Attorneys by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: An Integrative Model by Gerald Young

Causality and Causation in Law, Medicine, Psychiatry, and Psychology: Progression or Regression? by Gerald Young

Biopsychosocial Factors that Perpetuate Chronic Pain, Impairment, and Disability by Brian R. Theodore, Nancy D. Kishino and Robert J. Gatchel

Potential for Bias in MMPI-2 Assessments Using the Fake Bad Scale (FBS) by James N. Butcher, Carlton S. Gass, Edward Cumella, Zina Kally and Carolyn L. Williams

Gerald Young, Andrew W. Kane, Keith Nicholson, Causality of Psychological Injury: Presenting Evidence in Court. Book Review by Eric G. Mart

Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 1, Number 4 / December 2008

Editorial on PIL’s First Year: Growing Pains and Growing Prospects by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial on What Mental Health Clinicians/Practitioners Need to Know by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: A Biopsychosocial and Forensic Perspective by Gerald Young

Somatization and Medically Unexplained Symptoms in Psychological Injury: Diagnoses and Dynamics by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury: Systems, Change Processes, Development by Gerald Young

Personality Disorder in Psychological Injury: A Biopsychosocial and Forensic Perspective by Gerald Young

Coping in Psychological Injury: A Biopsychosocial and Forensic Perspective by Gerald Young

Psychotherapy for Psychological Injury: A Biopsychosocial and Forensic Perspective by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: Special Issue Epilogue by Gerald Young

Volume 2

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 2, Number 1 / March 2009

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial Policies on Defamation and Disclosure by Gerald Young

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial on Practice Criteria by Gerald Young

Trauma and Psychological Injury: Practice, Clinical, Legal, and Ethical Issues by Gerald Young and Izabela Z. Schultz

Judicial Evaluation of Traumatically Induced Fibromyalgia by Michael Finch

Myths and Mild Traumatic Brain Injury by Ronald M. Ruff and Christina Weyer Jamora

The Rigor of Research Design and “Forensic” Publications in Neuropsychological Research by Erin D. Bigler, Ryan R. Green, Thomas J. Farrer, Jeremy C. Roper and James B. Millward

The Ruff Neurobehavioral Inventory: Validity Indicators and Validity by Gerald Young, Natasha L. Merali and Ronald M. Ruff

Psychological Injury and Law: Editorial Note by Gerald Young

The MMPI-2 Symptom Validity Scale (FBS) Is an Empirically Validated Measure of Overreporting in Personal Injury Litigants and Claimants: Reply to Butcher et al. (2008) by Yossef S. Ben-Porath, Kevin W. Greve, Kevin J. Bianchini and Paul M. Kaufmann

Book Review: Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Postconcussion Syndrome: The New Evidence Base for Diagnosis and TreatmentMichael A. McCrea New York: Oxford University Press, 2008 [pp 205] ISBN: 978-0-19-532829-5 by Paul M. Richards

Book Review: Excellence in Psychological Injury and Law: Book Review of Motor Vehicle Collisions by Duckworth, Iezzi, and O’Donohue (2008) by Gerald Young

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 2, Number 2 / June 2009

Toward Preventing Future Tragedies: Mass Killings on College Campuses, Public Health, and Threat/Risk Assessment by Kirk Heilbrun, Joel Dvoskin and Anna Heilbrun

Torts, Damages, and Malpractice by David L. Shapiro

Psychological Injury from Licensing Complaints Against Mental Health Practitioners by Robert Henley Woody

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Assessing Response Style and Malingering by Steve Rubenzer

Psychology Journals: Proposal for Financial Disclosure Policies by Gerald Young

Working to Avoid Collateral Emotional Harm to Clients: Cases and Recommendations for the Personal Injury Attorney by Michael E. Schatman

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder’s Traumatic Stressor Criterion: History, Controversy, and Clinical and Legal Implications by Mary E. Long and Jon D. Elhai

Psychological Injury and Law: Journal Policy on Ongoing Debates by Gerald Young

Inaccuracies About the MMPI-2 Fake Bad Scale in the Reply by Ben-Porath, Greve, Bianchini, and Kaufman (2009) by Carolyn L. Williams, James N. Butcher, Carlton S. Gass, Edward Cumella and Zina Kally

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 2, Numbers 3-4 / December 2009

Special Issue: Disability and Return to Work

Determining Disability: New Advances in Conceptualization and Research by Izabela Z. Schultz

Using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) to Conceptualize Disability and Functioning in Psychological Injury and Law by David B. Peterson and Heidi Paul

Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Losses in Chronic Pain Patients by Whitney E. Worzer, Nancy D. Kishino and Robert J. Gatchel

Perceived Justice of Compensation Process for Return-to-Work: Development and Validation of a Scale by Renée-Louise Franche, Colette N. Severin, Hyunmi Lee, Sheilah Hogg-Johnson and C. Gail Hepburn, et al.

Perceived Injustice is Associated with Heightened Pain Behavior and Disability in Individuals with Whiplash Injuries by Michael J. L. Sullivan, Nicole Davidson, Beatrice Garfinkel, Nathida Siriapaipant and Whitney Scott

Damages for Mental Distress and Bad Faith in Disability Claims by Faith E. Hayman

Work Impairment and Disability in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Review and Recommendations for Psychological Injury Research and Practice by Jaye Wald and Steven Taylor

The Relationship of Chronological Age, Age at Injury, and Duration of Injury to Employment Status in Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury by Adam T. Hirsh, Ivan R. Molton, Kurt L. Johnson, Charles H. Bombardier and Mark P. Jensen

Editorial - New PIL Sections: Aims and Scope by Gerald Young

Symptom Validity Testing in Claimants with Alleged Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Comparing the Morel Emotional Numbing Test, the Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology, and the Word Memory Test by Thomas Merten, Elisabeth Thies, Katrin Schneider and Andreas Stevens

Volume 3

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 3, Number 1 / March 2010

Special Issue on Traumatic Brain Injury; Guest Editors: Ronald Ruff and Paul M. Richards

Introduction to Special Issue by Paul M. Richards and Ronald M. Ruff

Traumatic Brain Injury Across the Lifespan: A Neuropsychological Tutorial for Attorneys by Paul M. Richards and John W. Kirk

Neuropsychological Tests are Poor at Assessing the Frontal Lobes, Executive Functions, and Neurobehavioral Symptoms of Traumatically Brain-Injured Patients by Robert J. Sbordone

Neuroimaging in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury by Erin D. Bigler

Functional Neuroimaging of Symptom Validity Testing in Traumatic Brain Injury by Trevor ChuangKuo Wu, Mark D. Allen, Naomi J. Goodrich-Hunsaker, Ramona O. Hopkins and Erin D. Bigler

Re-examination of the Controversial Coexistence of Traumatic Brain Injury and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Misdiagnosis and Self-Report Measures by Robert J. Sbordone and Ronald M. Ruff

Brief Communication

The MMPI-2 Symptom Validity Scale (FBS) is an Empirically-Validated Measure of Over-reporting in Personal Injury Litigants and Claimants: reply to William et al. (2009) by Yossef S. Ben-Porath, Kevin W. Greve, Kevin J. Bianchini and Paul M. Kaufmann

Ambiguous Measures of Unknown Constructs: The MMPI-2 Fake Bad Scale (aka Symptom Validity Scale, FBS, FBS-r) by Carlton S. Gass, Carolyn L. Williams, Edward Cumella, James N. Butcher and Zina Kally

Erratum to: The MMPI-2 Symptom Validity Scale (FBS) is an Empirically-Validated Measure of Over-reporting in Personal Injury Litigants and Claimants: reply to Williams et al. (2009) by Yossef S. Ben-Porath, Kevin W. Greve, Kevin J. Bianchini and Paul M. Kaufmann

Erratum to: Inaccuracies About the MMPI-2 Fake Bad Scale in the Reply by Ben-Porath, Greve, Bianchini, and Kaufmann (2009) by Carolyn L. Williams, James N. Butcher, Carlton S. Gass, Edward Cumella and Zina Kally

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 3, Number 2 / June 2010

Special Issue on Posttraumatic Stress Disorder; Guest Editors: B. Christopher Frueh and Simon Wessely

Toward a Typology of High-Risk Major Stressful Events and Situations in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Related Psychopathology by Bruce P. Dohrenwend

The Delayed and Cumulative Consequences of Traumatic Stress: Challenges and Issues in Compensation Settings by Alexander C. McFarlane

Simulating Emotional Responses in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: An fMRI Study by Richard A. Bryant, Andrew Kemp, Kim Felmingham, Belinda Liddell and Gloria Olivieri, et al.

Investigating Differences in Truthful and Fabricated Symptoms of Traumatic Stress over Time by Kristine A. Peace, Stephen Porter and Brianna L. Cook

Psychological Evaluations of Veterans Claiming PTSD Disability with the Department of Veterans Affairs: A Clinician's Viewpoint by Gail Poyner

Error Rates in Forensic Child Sexual Abuse Evaluations by Steve Herman and Tiffany R. Freitas

Children’s Allegations of Sexual Abuse: A Model for Forensic Assessment by William O’Donohue, Lorraine Benuto and Matthew Fanetti

Traumatic Event Exposure and Behavioral Health Disorders among Incarcerated Females Self-Referred to Treatment by Nancy Wolff, Roshnee Vazquez, B. Christopher Frueh, Jing Shi and Brooke E. Schumann, et al.

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 3, Number 3 / September 2010

Special Issue on Traumatically Induced Pain; Guest Editors: Michael E. Schatman and Robert J. Gatchel

Introduction to Special Issue on Traumatically Induced Pain: Assessing and Addressing Controversies by Michael E. Schatman and Robert J. Gatchel

A Review of Evidence-Based Biopsychosocial Laws Governing the Treatment of Pain and Injury by Daniel Bruns, Kathryn Mueller and Pamela A. Warren

Whither Suffering? The Potential Impact of Tort Reform on the Emotional and Existential Healing of Traumatically Injured Chronic Pain Patients by Michael E. Schatman and James Sullivan

Malingering and Pain: is this a Major Problem in the Medicolegal Setting? by Krista J. Howard, Nancy D. Kishino, Valerie J. Johnston, Whitney E. Worzer and Robert J. Gatchel

The Three Major Components of Behavior Used for Assessing Pain: Problems Faced When There Is Discordance Among the Three by Robert J. Gatchel, Nancy D. Kishino and Dennis E. Minotti

Validity and Determinants of Clinicians’ Return to Work Judgments for Individuals Following Whiplash Injury by Whitney Scott and Michael J. L. Sullivan

Legal Representation and Dissatisfaction with Workers’ Compensation: Implications for Claimant Adjustment by John T. Chibnall and Raymond C. Tait

Physical Injuries, Pain, and Psychological Trauma: Pathways to Disability by Melanie P. Duckworth and Tony Iezzi

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 3, Number 4 / December 2010

The DSM-5 Draft: Implications for Psychological Injury and Law; Guest Editors: Gerald Young and Michael B. First

The PTSD Stressor Criterion as a Barrier to Malingering: DSM-5 Draft Commentaries by Michael B. First

The Future of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in the DSM by B. Christopher Frueh, Jon D. Elhai and Ron Acierno

Neurocognitive Disorders in DSM-V: Forensic Perspective by Izabela Z. Schultz

Chronic Pain in the DSM-IV and the DSM-5 Draft: The Pain of It All by Gerald Young

DSM-5 and Malingering: a Modest Proposal by David T. R. Berry and Nathaniel W. Nelson

Confusion and Incoherence in the Classification of Personality Disorder: Commentary on the Preliminary Proposals for DSM-5 by W. John Livesley

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in the DSM-5: Group Difference Commentary by Gerald Young and Ronn Johnson

The DSM-5 Draft: Critique and Recommendations by Gerald Young

Trends in Psychological/Psychiatric Injury and Law: Continuing Education, Practice Comments, Recommendations by Gerald Young

Volume 4

Psychological journal articles from:
Psychological Injury and Law
Volume 4, Number 1 / March 2011

Special Issue on Malingering: Special Topic (part 1)

The Detection of Feigned Psychiatric Disorders Using the MMPI-2-RF Overreporting Validity Scales: An Analog Investigation by Brandee E. Marion, Martin Sellbom and R. Michael Bagby

Association of the MMPI-2 Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF) Validity Scales with Structured Malingering Criteria by Dustin B. Wygant, Jaime L. Anderson, Martin Sellbom, Jesica L. Rapier and Leslie M. Allgeier, et al.

Neuropsychological and Psychological Aspects of Malingered Posttraumatic Stress Disorder by George J. Demakis and Jon D. Elhai

Detection of Malingered ADHD Using the MMPI-2-RF by Jordan P. Harp, Lindsey J. Jasinski, Anne L. Shandera-Ochsner, Lisa H. Mason and David T. R. Berry

Do Motivations for Malingering Matter? Symptoms of Malingered PTSD as a Function of Motivation and Trauma Type by Kristine A. Peace and Kimberly A. Masliuk

Erratum to: Trends in Psychological/Psychiatric Injury and Law: Continuing Education, Practice Comments, Recommendations by Gerald Young

More psychological journal article titles from Psychological Injury and Law will be printed here as they are published.



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Psychological Injury and Law Journal

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Announcements!

Announcement #1: ASAPIL is seeking two officers to serve on our Board of Directors--a Vice President and a Treasurer--who reside in New York state. If interested, please contact the President of the Association.

Announcement #2: Dr. Gerald Young recently completed a FREE online educational workshop on Psychological Injury and Law. Please see our Continuing Education page for details and links to the videos.

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