Quote:Mr. Maschke,
I am neither deluded or ignorant, I care not to debate another individuals research pro or con. I simply referenced them. The latest studies by the Department of Defense research persons places accuracy rates below 98%. I would be more inclined to accept their findings, however I have not obtained my personal copy of the research and findings. When this occurs I will let you know, then discuss those findings. I am more comfortable with those studies.
You are indeed deluded, to the extent that you believe, as you seemingly do, that the polygraph is capable of detecting lies or deception. As Dr. Drew Richardson has vividly put it, polygraphers who administer lie tests are involved in the detection of deception in the same way that a person who jumps from a tall building is involved in flying. See
How Polygraphers Become Deluded About Accuracy for relevant observations by the late Dr. David Lykken.
Quote:No where in any postings have I stated the studies were scientific or peer reviewed. I do have a problem with your insisting they were not peer reviewed, how would you know? They were reviewed by other persons in the polygraph industry (peer review) and some disagreed with the findings, some agreed with the findings. They are not in my humble opinion scientific studies. They do not meet the standards of a "Scientific Study" for one and they have not been validated by replication from other disinterested sources that I am aware of.
It is common knowledge that the American Polygraph Association's newsletter is a trade publication, not a
peer-reviewed scientific journal. Neither is the APA's quarterly journal
Polygraph, which also published Ansley's "The Validity and Reliability of Polygraph Testing" in Vol. 26 (1997), No. 4, pp. 215-39. Perhaps it is not a coincidence that Ansley was
Polygraph's editor-in-chief when it published his article.
Quote:If this is "Shoveling Shit" then so be it and I will accept your criticisms. I do not believe that to be the case. We are in fact off topic of the original post.
If you wish to persuade critically thinking people that polygraphy has an accuracy rate as high as the 90th percentile, you'll have to come up with something better than the citations you provided.