Quote:I don’t recall ever giving anyone advice to “day dream” or use any other kind of countermeasures. Perhaps the next time you wish to cite me as the source of oft-given moronic advice you could first determine if I have ever given any such advice.
Sarge wrote some 2 weeks ago;
Quote:If a test subject answers all questions honestly, and does not withhold any information, how is he behaving unethically if he does long division or recites poetry in his head?
Looks like a ringing endorsement of mental countermeasures, as the official moral/ legal authority of antipolygraph.org has declared such "day dreaming---a visionary fantasy indulged in while awake---a mental diversion"----as ethical.
Quote:Sergeant1107 hasn't "given advice on 'day dreaming.'" Rather, he has argued (and I agree) that it is not unethical for an examinee who has answered the relevant questions truthfully to use mental countermeasures (such as doing math in ones head or thinking exciting thoughts) during the asking of the "control" questions in order to reduce the risk of a false positive outcome. There is nothing moronic about that
You assume that examinee's can always automatically identify the relevant questions. More hair splitting ethics.
Quote:The stim test is merely a gimmick used by polygraphers in an effort to falsely convince examinees that the polygraph can detect deception.
The stim test has several reasons for it's use. None of which are called gimmicks. A gimmick is something that has no basis in science, exists for entertainment purposes or to merely get attention, and should never be confused with a tangible value or deed----the very definition of TLBTLD (lol)
Quote:An orienting response is the kind one might expect, for example, if a large book were unexpectedly dropped to the floor. (The Guilty Knowledge Test isn't based on orienting resonses, either.)
I did not say the GKT was based on an orienting response. I wrote that the stim test was based on a "secondary orienting response"----in other words, it is a "recognizing response", not an initial response as is your "book slamming" analogy, thought to work via reticular activation, or memory recognition. Regardless, the blind stim test is the cousin of the GKT as it contains a "key" (the secret) and padding (non-relevant items.) Perhaps some more desparate conferance calls to your examiner friend/source are in order. You seem to know two things about blind stim tests and one of them, Jack, left town.
Quote: [quote]Dr. Louis Rovner (a participant in the trolling campaign you organized on this message board) last year testified in court regarding The Lie Behind the Lie Detector: "He [George Maschke] has provided a sophisticated and accurate account of what goes on in a polygraph test, essentially what I did in my research, but his is so thorough and complete it's just breathtaking."
I would disagree with Dr. Rovner's assertion and/or statement regarding the "accuracy" of TLBTLD. You speak as if examiners agree with each other on all points. What
is breathtaking is the volume of information taken from DODPI/DACA manuals---much of which is spot on. It is the assertions that are moronic, and rather than rehashing the subject, I would invite readers to read the bulk of each polygraph examiner's postings. If TLBTLD was rightfully asserted, we wouldn't be here. Data and Logic are not one in the same.