Quote:From my understanding, after reading the LBTLD a number of times, is that during the a "control" question like "Have you ever lied to a loved one?". I would respond with "yes" and not use any CM's. And after some minor admissions when asked "Other than what you told me, have you ever lied to a loved one?”. The expected answer would be "no", so I would respond "no" and this is where I would apply mental countermeasures to create a higher response.
Am I understanding this correctly?
No. You are not understanding this correctly. All questions are reviewed during the pre-test phase when you're not connected to the polygraph instrument. If you choose to make minor admissions to control questions during the pre-test phase, using countermeasures at that time won't be an option because, again, you won't be connected to the polygraph instrument. By the time the "in-test" phase begins, "control" questions should already be agreed upon that exclude any admissions you may have made.
Review Chapter 3, which covers polygraph procedure.
Quote:Also I was bit confused...
On page 146 it says:
"As soon as you recognize that the question your polygrapher is asking is a “control” question, or, alternatively, immediately after answering the question, change your baseline breathing pattern to produce one of the five pneumograph reactions that DoDPI considers to be most significant in chart scoring"
One of these DoDPI reactions are (pg 147):
"The second reaction, a respiration rate decrease, may be produced by simply breathing more slowly for 5-15 seconds, ending before the asking of the next question"
However, on pg. 149 it mentions using a mental countermeasure like thinking of exciting thoughts, (e.g., falling off a cliff, an encounter with a rattlesnake, being raped at knifepoint—use your imagination). You want to think of something that will make your heart race and cause an increase in blood pressure... A breathing reaction may naturally accompany such mental activity without your having to think about it.
Would this not increase your breathing rate? It says to lower it as a counter measure for control questions???
Some clarification would be most helpful.
Slower breathing is only one of the five scorable breathing reactions. In any event, a common breathing reaction associated with mental countermeasures is blocking.