nonombre wrote on Aug 4
th, 2005 at 3:16am:
Dr. Richardson,
So if faced with a requirement to take an RI polygraph examination, how does one ensure he will in all cases "beat" the test?" How would you do it?
Nonombre
Nonombre,
I am certainly not trying to answer for Drew, but I thought I’d add my opinion…
There is no way of being certain you can “beat” the test for an RI exam, because you can be “failed” for any of a number of reasons totally unrelated to actual deception. In that way it is just like the other forms of polygraph testing. I know from personal experience that being completely truthful and not withholding any information does not guarantee that you can “beat” the test. In fact doing so resulted in a failure rate of 75% for the four polygraphs I had to endure.
To me, this cuts to the heart of the matter regarding polygraphs. If a person can take a polygraph, tell the complete truth and not withhold anything even remotely relevant, and still fail three out of four times that indicates a fatal flaw in the test itself.
I’m not interested in comparisons with the subjective oral board interviews or the subjective background investigation. The polygraph is supposed to obtain damaging admissions and/or provide data to conclude if the subject is being truthful or deceptive with regards to the relevant questions. That is its function, and it is largely ineffective in fulfilling that function.
If the subject does not believe in the myth of the polygraph as a “lie detector” then no damaging admissions will be forthcoming.
Anything less than 100% accuracy in the truthful vs. deceptive assessment is worthless. If you want to use an accuracy rate of 75% (which I believe is significantly higher than reality, but I’ll use it for purposes of discussion) then for every hundred subjects who are labeled as deceptive, twenty-five of them were actually truthful. Which ones? It’s impossible to tell, and that’s where the polygraph falls short with its less-than-complete-accuracy.
If a truthful subject can be branded as deceptive a significant percentage of the time, and a deceptive subject can be labeled as truthful a significant percentage of the time, then what is the final utility of the polygraph? Other than as an interrogation intimidator to be used for extracting confessions from unwitting subjects, I can’t see any legitimate use.