Quote: I know the polygraph process is not accurate because I was telling the truth and answering all the same questions the same way on all four of my pre-employment polygraphs. I failed three out of the four.
I know polygraph works because I took three and passed them all.
Quote: Some of the polygraph examiners on this board respond to my story by calling me a liar, and then claiming to "prove" mathematically that the polygraph is accurate. Then they tell me my experiences don't mean anything.
Stop playing the victim, and start paying attention. Do you have a college education? Did you ever study statistics or research methodology? People have only pointed out what you should already know. You've got to separate fact from emotion and be objective. The data is what it is.
Nobody has ever said your experiences don't mean anything. They aren't scientific data, but they have meaning. They motivate you to be here. They motivate you to err. They blind you from reason. They have much meaning. If you are telling the truth, and I don't know one way or the other - none of us (save you) do - then they only attest to the fact that polygraph isn't perfect. Find a test that is.
Is the interview? Is the written test? Is the psych? Pick any employment hurdle along the way and you'll find problems.
Quote: It seems they are not familiar with Occam's Razor.
Yes, we're familiar, and we've conceded the test isn't always accurate. The question is, does it give us more information in the long run. That's where the math comes in, and the answer is yes, if done correctly.