The aim of this very ambitious volume is to provide information
about “the pragmatics of test selection, interpretation,
and report writing,” “a practitioner's guide
to actual test interpretation and integration,” and “a
comprehensive guide to neuropsychological assessment.”
Groth-Marnat decries the absence of such “a book,”
as if he expected that the broad base of neuropsychological
knowledge was to be found in a single volume. There was the
tacit assumption that the knowledge required for neuropsychological
assessment could be adequately and sufficiently obtained from
“a book” of this type. This expectation appears
quite unrealistic, naïve, and simple-minded. Based on current
guidelines in the profession (à la the Houston Conference),
it should be expected that most of the knowledge Groth-Marnat
seeks in one book can be acquired only with an extended,
specialized course of study followed by intense, supervised
experience. That is where one should obtain information about
test selection, interpretation and integration so that the end
product is “a clear, coherent description of the impact
that brain dysfunction has had on a person's cognitions,
personality, emotions, interpersonal relationships.” That
type of knowledge, and report-writing skill, is not to be had
by reading “a book.” Integrating the complexities
of test data, and writing effectively, are both exceedingly
difficult to teach even in an apprentice situation, and more
so through a single volume. This objection thus ventilated,
now on to the meat of the book.