Page Index Toggle Pages: 1 2 [3]  ReplyAdd Poll Send TopicPrint
Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Sharing My Polygraph Experience (Read 20053 times)
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box 1904
Ex Member


Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #30 - Aug 10th, 2007 at 10:20am
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
flbcm850 wrote on Aug 8th, 2007 at 4:16pm:
I took my CVSA exam this morning and after 2 weeks of extreme nervousness, I can say that I passed with flying colors, without using ANY countermeasures whatsoever...  No breathing techniques used at all. I can't believe how easy that exam was. It's amazing what a joke it really is.  I can say with confidence that no one should have any trouble passing this exam!  Shocked


Excuse the editing.

Breathing CM's wont help you one iota in a CVSA test.
Not one of the Polygraph CM's will help you in fact.
 
When taking a CVSA test, the examiner may instruct you to wait till he signals you to answer.
If he does, then he's quite sharp and what you should do is wait a second longer before you answer.
If he does not (signal when to answer) then wait approx 2 secs before you answer - that way your 
Flight or Fight response would have diminished somewhat.

But, the biggest problem remains that 'situational stress' does not equate to 'deceptive stress'.
Quite possibly you had nothing serious to conceal.
Smiley
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box stoppolyabusenow
New User
*
Offline



Posts: 11
Joined: Dec 4th, 2007
Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #31 - Dec 8th, 2007 at 3:33pm
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
Yes, I don't need to know how to do zodiac readings or palm reading to know that they are bunk.  It's the same with the polygraph, all you have to know is how it works to know that it doesn't work.  It measures physiological responses and that is not a lie detector.  And don't forget, many of us know for sure that it doesn't work because I know I'm telling the truth and if the machine or the operator says I'm not, I know it doesn't work.  One polygrapher said to me, "How can you know the polygraph doesn't work?"  I said, "Because you dipshit, you/it say I'm lying and I know that I'm not, therefore I know for sure that it doesn't work."
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box Sergeant1107
God Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 730
Location: Connecticut, USA
Joined: May 21st, 2005
Gender: Male
Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #32 - Dec 9th, 2007 at 9:23am
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
stoppolyabusenow wrote on Dec 8th, 2007 at 3:33pm:
 And don't forget, many of us know for sure that it doesn't work because I know I'm telling the truth and if the machine or the operator says I'm not, I know it doesn't work.  One polygrapher said to me, "How can you know the polygraph doesn't work?"  I said, "Because you dipshit, you/it say I'm lying and I know that I'm not, therefore I know for sure that it doesn't work."

I have written similar sentiments on this board many times.  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.

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.  They have written that I have psychoses that prevent me from being accurately polygraphed, and that I am stupid for expecting a different result on any of my subsequent exams after failing the first one.  They are also completely comfortable jumping to the (erroneous) conclusion that because I refer to my polygraph experiences as a "story", I am obviously not telling the truth and am not even a real cop.   

It seems they are not familiar with Occam's Razor.  If I tell the truth on a test which is purported to detect deception, and the test result is that I am lying, the simplest explanation is that the test is not accurate.

I'm sure that examiners can come up with loads of possible excuses as to why a truthful person could fail a polygraph.  If the polygraph was a valid method of detecing deception then truthful people would pass, and deceptive people would fail.  That simply doesn't happen with enough regularity.
  

Lorsque vous utilisez un argumentum ad hominem, tout le monde sait que vous êtes intellectuellement faillite.
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box Barry_C
Very Senior User
****
Offline



Posts: 114
Joined: Oct 17th, 2007
Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #33 - Dec 12th, 2007 at 11:32pm
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
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.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box notguilty1
Especially Senior User
*****
Offline



Posts: 300
Joined: Feb 2nd, 2008
Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #34 - Feb 3rd, 2008 at 8:20pm
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
The problem with poly's are also that if the falsely accused, unless somehow proven innocent by other later evidence are  still considered guilty based on the poly results. Therefore counting those results as "accurate", and the accused .....GULITY.
I think that the fact that people with "agendas" get on here to "poke fun at George and others" is a further argument of the failed validity of poly's.
Would you rather have a science that is never questioned even though there are SERIOUS flaws in it?
If the science was good and proven there would no need to "poke fun" or disagree.
I think DNA testing may be a good example of a scientific and court approved test that not many are fighting though I cannot be sure of that.
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box EJohnson
Limited (No Attachments)
Offline


Internet Countermeasures
Yields Failed Tests

Posts: 176
Joined: Oct 23rd, 2007
Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #35 - Feb 3rd, 2008 at 9:46pm
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
notguilty1 wrote on Feb 3rd, 2008 at 8:20pm:
The problem with poly's are also that if the falsely accused, unless somehow proven innocent by other later evidence are  still considered guilty based on the poly results. Therefore counting those results as "accurate", and the accused .....GULITY.
I think that the fact that people with "agendas" get on here to "poke fun at George and others" is a further argument of the failed validity of poly's.
Would you rather have a science that is never questioned even though there are SERIOUS flaws in it?
If the science was good and proven there would no need to "poke fun" or disagree.
I think DNA testing may be a good example of a scientific and court approved test that not many are fighting though I cannot be sure of that.

Plenty of people are fighting against DNA testing, and there are websites that are advocating a more measured weight given by courts regarding DNA evidence. Like any test, there are serious errors. As more and more of the DNA test errors are coming to light, we will see a backlash against that modality of testing. 
http://www.scientific.org/articles/JFS%20excerpt.htm
  

All men are mortal. Socrates was mortal. Therefore, &&all men are Socrates.-----Woody Allen  &&
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box T.M. Cullen
God Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 858
Location: Hawaii
Joined: Dec 5th, 2007
Gender: Male
Re: Sharing My Polygraph Experience
Reply #36 - Feb 19th, 2008 at 4:18am
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
Plenty of people are fighting against DNA testing, and there are websites that are advocating a more measured weight given by courts regarding DNA evidence. Like any test, there are serious errors. As more and more of the DNA test errors are coming to light, we will see a backlash against that modality of testing.


Yes, but at least DNA testing is "scientific".

Sure there are errors in any test (scientific or pseudo-scientific).  But can you honestly put Polygraph testing in the same category as  DNA testing, or HIV testing in terms of scientific validity?

Can you imagine coming up with a HIV test which:

1.  Can't really tell for sure whether you have HIVs?

2.  Routinely labels healthy people as "aids carriers"?

P.S.  I changed my moniker, per your request.  Happy?
« Last Edit: Feb 19th, 2008 at 4:36am by T.M. Cullen »  

"There is no direct and unequivocal connection between lying and these physiological states of arousal...(referring to polygraph)."

Dr. Phil Zimbardo, Phd, Standford University
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1 2 [3] 
ReplyAdd Poll Send TopicPrint
Sharing My Polygraph Experience

Please type the characters that appear in the image. The characters must be typed in the same order, and they are case-sensitive.
Open Preview Preview

You can resize the textbox by dragging the right or bottom border.
Insert Hyperlink Insert FTP Link Insert Image Insert E-mail Insert Media Insert Table Insert Table Row Insert Table Column Insert Horizontal Rule Insert Teletype Insert Code Insert Quote Edited Superscript Subscript Insert List /me - my name Insert Marquee Insert Timestamp No Parse
Bold Italicized Underline Insert Strikethrough Highlight
                       
Change Text Color
Insert Preformatted Text Left Align Centered Right Align
resize_wb
resize_hb







Max 200000 characters. Remaining characters:
Text size: pt
More Smilies
View All Smilies
Collapse additional features Collapse/Expand additional features Smiley Wink Cheesy Grin Angry Sad Shocked Cool Huh Roll Eyes Tongue Embarrassed Lips Sealed Undecided Kiss Cry
Attachments More Attachments Allowed file types: txt doc docx ics psd pdf bmp jpe jpg jpeg gif png swf zip rar tar gz 7z odt ods mp3 mp4 wav avi mov 3gp html maff pgp gpg
Maximum Attachment size: 500000 KB
Attachment 1:
X