Polyreject wrote on May 9
th, 2005 at 7:16pm:
George and others:
My intuition tells me that this polygrapher and maybe others suspect CM use when there is a significant reaction to control questions. But let me ask you all this:
What is the reaction difference between a normal lie on a control, and a control manipulated by a CM? (Let’s say the anal CM)
It seems that there is no obvious difference between reactions that result from anxiety associated with the asking of a question and those produced by other means, such as cognitive activity or tongue-biting. Again, in the available peer-reviewed research (by Honts et al.; see abstracts in the bibliography of
TLBTLD), even experienced polygraphers were unable to detect countermeasures at better-than-chance levels of accuracy.
Quote:If there is a substantial difference between the two, then I can't imagine the polygrapher having too difficult of the time distinguishing between them. On this point, if I were a polygrapher, which I’m not (and I know some of you think that I am) why would I answer Dr. Richardson’s challenge and give away my secret???
Dr. Richardson's
polygraph countermeasure challenge does not require the polygrapher to disclose
how he or she detects countermeasures. It merely requires that he or she do so.
Quote:I have a hard time accepting the notion that polygraphers randomly accuse people of using CMs. (I'm sure it has happened, but it does not make sense for this practice to be the norm)
If random CM accusations are given by polygraphers then I would imagine they would be intended to elicit a confession of CM use. (This idea would be especially true, if examiners really cannot detect CMs, which I'm not so sure about).
However, if no such confession is rendered then it seems counter-intuitive for the sake of the agency's hiring practice to label the person as using CMs nonetheless and dismiss their application.
Having worked for the fed gov't in the past, I know that it is far from perfect. But to suggest that CM accusations are randomly made, when the polygrapher truly cannot detect CM use, and applicants are subsequently disqualified even without making a confession, then that is essentially saying that the agencies adhere to a level of conspiratorial behavior that is so far-fetched it is nearly unbelievable.
I don't suppose that accusations of countermeasure use are being made on a
random basis. Rather, I suspect DoDPI has established some guidelines for such decisions. However, such guidelines have not been published either by DoDPI or by any polygraph association. In any event, the mere existence of any such guidelines does not necessarily entail that polygraphers are actually detecting countermeasures at better-than-chance levels.
With regard to ethics, note that federal, state, and local agencies are branding applicants and employees as liars, even without admissions, based on a procedure (polygraph screening) that the National Academy of Sciences has concluded is completely invalid. It is no great ethical leap for agencies relying on polygraph screening to further make "determinations" that such persons have employed countermeasures, even without an admission.
The Lie Behind the Lie Detector is presently being downloaded from this site at a sustained rate of about 1,000 times per week. If just five percent of those who download it are using the countermeasures discussed in Chapter 4, that would be about 50 persons weekly, or some 2,500 per year. But in the four and a half years AntiPolygraph.org has been on-line, we have heard from only a handful of people stating that they used countermeasures but nonetheless failed to pass. As noted above, several of those turned out to be polygraphers in disguise. I should add here that I am confident, after our private correspondence, that you are
not in this category. But if polygraphers were genuinely able to detect countermeasures, I would expect that we'd be receiving more frequent reports like yours.
Quote: How do I retrieve my file via FOIA? Who do I write to and what do I ask for?
You'll find tips on how to file a Privacy Act request in Chapter 5 of
TLBTLD. Quote: Also, if I get my chart, will you post it on this website?
Absolutely.