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Topic Summary - Displaying 21 post(s).
Posted by: kelly
Posted on: Sep 3rd, 2019 at 2:47pm
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Thank you very much!! well appreciated! @George W. Maschke
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Aug 31st, 2019 at 9:45am
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Quote:
Which of the following is an example of a comparison or control question?

             
Did you kill Ms. Smith?

             
Were you at the bank on Thursday?

             
Have you ever taken something that did not belong to you?

             
Smiley Did you see Wendy Jones in the schoolyard yesterday morning?

... would that be a comparison question?



The only question among those you listed that would be a "control" or comparison question is, "Have you ever taken something that did not belong to you?"
Posted by: example
Posted on: Aug 30th, 2019 at 9:51pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Which of the following is an example of a comparison or control question?

           
Did you kill Ms. Smith?

           
Were you at the bank on Thursday?

           
Have you ever taken something that did not belong to you?

           
Smiley Did you see Wendy Jones in the schoolyard yesterday morning?

... would that be a comparison question?

Posted by: Stephen
Posted on: Oct 28th, 2016 at 6:50am
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When spiking your body's response to control questions, should you lie or tell the truth when answering the control questions?
Posted by: maricella
Posted on: Feb 15th, 2016 at 4:26pm
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Hello everyone i am 16 i truthfully want to admit the abuse and intentions of my stepdad but idont want my mom to leave me other questions of the past ive never had a polygraph please help its thursday feb 18th 2016
Posted by: Jeff-G
Posted on: Dec 3rd, 2012 at 11:24am
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My question is not about pre-employment or legal polygraphs.  My wife doesn't believe something I told her. Its' not about cheating or anything, it's just about something a family member told me, then when she asked them they denied ever having the conversation with me.  She just can't believe that the family member would have said that & this may cause a separation.  I want to get a polygraph to prove to her I'm not lying.  What type of control questions would they give me?  I have nothing to hide, so I wouldn't have any need to conceal (thus lie) on any control questions.  Also, if I'm 32 & they ask if I was born in 1968, thus I say no, what is supposed to happen on the polygraph?  If I'm honest; I'd think nothing would change.  Does our body react different to a no vs yes response? Or is it the fact that I have think for a second about the question?   

Thanks
Posted by: polytek
Posted on: Aug 20th, 2008 at 9:17am
  Mark & Quote
The Control questions used nowadays are not as subtle as
"Have you ever lied to a loved one...." etc
Those are far too easy to identify as CQ's.
An examiner could ask, " Have you ever driven under the influence of alcohol ?" / and " Have you ever used a controlled substance without a prescription ?"
Either of these could be CQ or RQ - it is situation dependent and you will get the same intensity of definition during question review.
No examiner is going to spell out for you which is which.
The examinee has to decide for himself during a Pre-Employment screening which might or not be CQ's, dependent on the level of employ / position applied for. Usually you can asusme that the wider and vaguer a question is - the more likely it is to be a CQ.

During an issue test (a Did you it type) the CQ's are easier to identify. They will refer to an earlier age (..before the age of...--which is a Backster control) or " In your entire life, --Reid Universal Control) 
The poly industry is constantly trying to re-invent the wheel iro CQ's
as a means to circumvent the use of CM's (which are applied during the CQ scoring window) - but it is a difficult task for them as most would not recognize a decent CM if it bit them in the ass.
Posted by: Lethe
Posted on: Aug 19th, 2008 at 10:19pm
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If there is just one or two questions that have you confused as to whether they are control questions or relevant questions there is an easy way to determine with high likelihood of success which they are.

It involves the pretest phase where the questions are reviewed.  Simply call attention to the question that you are not sure of; ask for clarification of it.  The polygrapher will answer your question, and then he'll call attention to another question, as if to see if you understand it correctly.  If the first question that you asked about was a control then the question the polygrapher will bring up will be a relevant; and if the first question that you bring up was a relevant, the one the polygrapher brings up will be a control.  So, if you have already identified the question the polygrapher brings up as a control question, you can be sure that the first question that you mentioned and were confused about is a relevant, and vice versa.

This works because polygraphers try very hard to make sure that the magnitude of the control and relevant questions will appear approximately the same to (uninformed) subjects.  But, whenever a question has attention called to it, that tends to enhance the response the subject produces on it, whether they respond honestly or not.  To counter this effect, the examiner must equally enhance an opposing question so that they'll be comparing apples to apples.

Obviously, this will only work if there is only one or two questions out of the lot that you're unsure of.  If you're confused about half of them, you probably won't be sure of the status of the second question that is brought up and so will have gained nothing.
Posted by: T.M. Cullen
Posted on: Aug 19th, 2008 at 6:05pm
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Just ask the examiner:  "Is that one of those control questions I am expected to lie on?  But, I thought we were going to be completely honest with each other.  Now I'm confused.  MR. EXAMINER!"   Cool

TC
Posted by: Lethe
Posted on: Aug 19th, 2008 at 1:30pm
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polytek wrote on Aug 18th, 2008 at 1:04pm:
jonny5 wrote on Mar 29th, 2005 at 7:28pm:
My understanding of a control question, is a question that has no relevance to a specific event.  Is this correct?  So a question beginning with, "have you ever" is an example of a control question?  Are they the same as "comparison" questions?


Control Question = Comparison Question
"Have you ever...." sounds like the prefix to a Relevant Question
in a screening type test.
Control Questions prefixes are, " Before the age of......"
& "Between the ages of....." and "In your entire life did you ever...."


Control questions can begin with "have you ever..."  As in "have you ever told a lie to a loved one?"  (It's assumed everyone has.)
Posted by: polytek
Posted on: Aug 18th, 2008 at 1:04pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
jonny5 wrote on Mar 29th, 2005 at 7:28pm:
My understanding of a control question, is a question that has no relevance to a specific event.  Is this correct?  So a question beginning with, "have you ever" is an example of a control question?  Are they the same as "comparison" questions?


Control Question = Comparison Question
"Have you ever...." sounds like the prefix to a Relevant Question
in a screening type test.
Control Questions prefixes are, " Before the age of......"
& "Between the ages of....." and "In your entire life did you ever...."
Posted by: polytek
Posted on: Aug 18th, 2008 at 1:01pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Quote:
is that true for the fbi? will the fbi forgive if a person used it a few times when they were 19?  I hear different stories:

yes so and so agency will forgive
no don't confess because they will not forgive

can someone clarify which is the best move?

Quote:
hi.. the use of marijuana alone should not disqualify you from the job..lying about is should..most agencies have a time frame..i.e. 3 years with no use.. check for the Dept's standards..



If I experimented with marijuana a few times when i was 19 I would not admit to it now, because as sure as nuts the system will hold it against you.

When in doubt, chicken out and deny, deny, deny.


Posted by: george hamilton
Posted on: Aug 11th, 2008 at 11:12pm
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is that true for the fbi? will the fbi forgive if a person used it a few times when they were 19?  I hear different stories:

yes so and so agency will forgive
no don't confess because they will not forgive

can someone clarify which is the best move?

Quote:
hi.. the use of marijuana alone should not disqualify you from the job..lying about is should..most agencies have a time frame..i.e. 3 years with no use.. check for the Dept's standards..

Posted by: T.M. Cullen
Posted on: Jun 17th, 2008 at 7:32pm
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But when taking a preemployment polygraph, with some formats you are EXPECTED TO LIEl when asked a control question.

Also, polygraphers KNOWINGLY LIE to the applicant to trick him/her into volunteering information.

TC
Posted by: gary davis
Posted on: Jun 17th, 2008 at 12:51pm
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hi.. the use of marijuana alone should not disqualify you from the job..lying about is should..most agencies have a time frame..i.e. 3 years with no use.. check for the Dept's standards..as for theft from a job..most of us have stolen.. unless the value of property taken is excessive.. it is no big deal.. there are two problems with lying during the employment process..first if at some later point it is discovered you lied to get hired you can be terminated, if you are the victim of employer misconduct you may lose your rights to damages because of your were not qualified for employment second.. rest assured if you get involved in a BIG case you back ground will be reviewed by Private Investigators with more money the the PD. any dirt hidden however minor will be exposed (ask Mark Furman) and your credibility in court will be compromised.

Finally when a person applies for a job they appear at their very best.. if the best includes lying, hiding and other acts of dishonesty then you can't expect better on the job.   the world is not a perfect place if you don't meet the qualifications for one agency there are many others that have different qualifications.

gary
Posted by: Monique Moreno
Posted on: Jun 17th, 2008 at 8:20am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
see i dont understand why they make a big deal about stuff that you did when u were underage... i understand if u have misdameanors and what not but i have a clean background... but my problem is i have tried marijuana and also stolen something from my job when i was young... so because of that im not going to pass? Angry
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Mar 29th, 2005 at 7:36pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
None of the questions in a pre-employment polygraph screening examination involve a specific event (that is, one that is known to have occurred). Both relevant and "control" (and even, possibly, irrelevant) questions could begin, "Have you ever..."

To gain a better understanding of "control" questions, review Chapter 3 of The Lie Behind the Lie Detector, where they are explained in detail along with other aspects of polygraph procedure.
Posted by: jonny5
Posted on: Mar 29th, 2005 at 7:28pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
My understanding of a control question, is a question that has no relevance to a specific event.  Is this correct?  So a question beginning with, "have you ever" is an example of a control question?  Are they the same as "comparison" questions?
Posted by: George W. Maschke
Posted on: Mar 21st, 2005 at 8:54am
  Mark & QuoteQuote
See Appendix D of DoDPI's Law Enforcement Pre-Employment Test examiner's guide for additional examples of "control" questions:

http://antipolygraph.org/documents/dodpi-lepet.pdf
Posted by: Fred F.
Posted on: Mar 21st, 2005 at 5:57am
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Jonny5,

The LASD's primary focus is on drug use, nothing else. If you have never used drugs, they still may throw a curve at you for drug use.  The LASD likes to DQ for drug use and their failure rate is about 60%.

You should study TLBTLD and get very familiar with the information. The LASD has a high failure rate as they use the poly as a background screening device. If you look at this link
http://www.antipolygraph.org/documents/lasd-polygraph-pamphlet.pdf 

you can read the polygraph pamphlet put out by the LASD

Good Luck

Fred F. Wink
Posted by: jonny5
Posted on: Mar 20th, 2005 at 7:52pm
  Mark & QuoteQuote
Hey Everyone, 

I am going to be taking a polygraph at somepoint in the near future for the Los Angeles County Sheriff, and I am looking for some sample control questions that I can study and identify, that are different from those in TLBTLD.  If anyone has any that they would like to share with me, I would appreciate it much.
 
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