Sergeant1107 wrote on May 3
rd, 2008 at 9:22am:
[quote author=6D7F7D757B6A6A1E0 link=1209768858/0#3 date=1209785819] Be honest and if, as you say, your life is boring, you will be a breeze for the process and a pleasure for the examiner to deal with.
Good Luck!
Sackett
Sarge, you wrote, " was honest and I didn't have anything in my past and I failed three out of four."
Perhaps you fall into the category of those who minimize, rationalize and avoid responsibility for your actions or statements because YOU think the information was not important enough to disclose; then got caught! Or maybe, you were a "false positive." But, three out of four tests being wrong? In my profession, and numerically speaking, that probability is minimal.
Of course, your buddies here have established the convenient excuse that there is no way to prove the so-called negative, so ground truth can never really be known. I get it.
What makes me confident enough to dispense such advice is the fact I do this every day. I haven't had (supposedly) a bad experiences that somehow (in my own mind and through validation by other "victims") qualify me to talk about it. I didn't just read a book which justifies my behavior in attacking a well established profession. I do it! You had four tests? I gave more than that last week. Ask anyone I test and most will say that I am fair, direct and professional.
To your statements. I believe the "only requirement" for passing a polygraph is to tell the truth and follow instructions. No, I do not think every single person on this board is lying, but I think most are in fact rationalizing, minimizing, avoiding responsibility for some action they assumed would have no impact on their test and when it did, claim unfairness and innaccuracy.
The research establishes there are false positives, as there are false negatives (as recently discussed). I'm simply saying that it is a viable manner to establish honesty and it is the only manner in which we have to do so. Some of you were "victims." OK, I believe you think you were. That makes you, for a lack of better terminology, collateral damage. And, while it does effect you, it does not effect the entire profession and certainly does not mean the baby should be thrown out with the dirty water...
Sackett