Quote:Enlighten us!
Okay, Let me take a shot at explaining this to you:
The R/I my department uses is typically a five relevant test: Since we allow our recruitment officers to discuss the relevant questions with applicants beforehand, I do not mind stating them here. They are:
1. Have you been involved in any crime we do not already know about?
2. Have you concealed any information about your drug involvement?
3. Have you ever driven under the influence of alcohol?
4. Have you falsified your employment document in any way?
5. Have you attempted in any way to defeat this test?
Now we ask each relevant at least three times and we do repeat relevants on charts. Now that I have explained the test, Let's take a look at the results of the R/I test on this particular applicant:
Let's say the applicant has used drugs more than he has reported during his employment processing. As a result, he has theoretically already responded to the drug question, the crime question, and the documents question three out of three times. He is already deceptive on the test. However, if he applies what he has been taught on this website, he is going to artificially enhance his response to the crime, documents, and countermeasures question in an effort to "mask" his drug question responses?
Hmmm, doesn’t make much sense to me...
Now, just for the sake of argument, let's say that psychological set has really focused the examinee in this case, and he is responding primarily to the drug question. Now, once again, in accordance with the directions he has received on this site, he artificially enhances his response to the crime, DUI, documents, and countermeasures question in an effort to mask his drug question responses. Again, theoretically, this is what the examiner would see:
First set of askings:
Drug question: Response
Crime question: Response
DUI Question: Response
Documents Question: No Response
CM Question: Response
Second set of Askings:
Drug question: Response
Crime question: No Response
DUI Question: No Response
Documents Question: Response
CM Question: Response
Third set of Responses:
Drug question: Response
Crime question: Response
DUI Question: No Response
Documents Question: Response
CM Question: Response
Now remember, if the examinee shows response two out of three times on any ONE relevant question, he fails the test. Now do the math. What do you think this applicant's prospects are now?
Incidentially, I do admit I got a little confused trying to apply the "advice," therefore I may have the gotten the exact order of responses a little incorrect (and think, I am an examiner. Imagine a "layman" trying to make this all "work.")
Add to this the problem the examinee confronts with the rotating of questions, and all the cognitive activity he has to put into this effort during actual chart collection (e.g., "okay do I CM this question?, no I think I am supposed CM the next one.") Remember, all that is picked up and recorded by the polygraph instrument.
So, in the end, the applicant has failed ALL the questions, his processing into the P.D. is terminated, and he finds himself working at Taco-Bell...
Now just think, if the applicant would have been HONEST with the application process (and the examiner who's purpose is to provide a final chance to resolve issues), and simply discussed the additional drug use, he would in all probability been wearing a shiny new police badge, and not a greasy paper hat.
Thank you Anti-Polygraph.org. Another happy customer...