1st4th5thand6th, I do not wish to imply that examiners “reward” those subjects who deny researching polygraph. The examiner will automatically assume they have. It's just that those who admit to researching the “test” will be facing even more scrutiny, in my view. Think of it as a double whammy. As to polygraph being “all an act,” I must disagree. Polygraph testing – in single-issue or incident-specific applications – works to a fairly significant degree, although that exact figure is unknowable. I doubt it's nearly as high as the polygraph industry would have one believe. The error rate may in fact be huge, but when used as a gross (i.e., heavy handed) culling tool, polygraph indeed gets the job done – but it comes at a cost: Collateral damage is high. Uncle Sugar is more worried about catching bad guys than he is victimizing good guys. That's just the way the cookie crumbles. It's not going to change. To be clear, I have no firsthand knowledge of the federal government's internal polygraph machinations. Many federal examiners monitor this site, so maybe someone will chime in and address your questions. Meanwhile, something that should be of concern to anyone pondering taking a polygraph test is the inherent religiosity rampant in the industry. For example, polygraph seminars routinely begin with an appeal to supernatural powers for guidance. I am not making this up. Invocations to a deity are actual line items on the programs of scheduled events. At the conclusion of such seminars, benedictions are not uncommon. When I started in polygraph some ten years ago, I thought all those little giveaways I saw at seminars, such as mouse pads and coffee mugs, that were emblazoned with “IN GOD WE TRUST, ALL OTHERS WE POLYGRAPH” were just feel-good freebies sporting a cute punchline. But there seems to be more to it, from what I've seen. How this squares with the alleged science, I don't know. Imagine a huge hall filled with hundreds of polygraph examiners, their heads bowed in reverence as a designated cleric – usually a minister, chaplain, pastor, etc. – makes an impassioned plea to The Almighty for the members to be heavenly endowed with apt judgment as they go about their polygraph work. In other words, the polygraph profession, at their events, routinely appeals to God and asks for help. OK... I got to wondering... What happens, then, in a case where God apparently gives some sought-after help to a polygrapher? Say an examiner runs a so-called maintenance polygraph on a convicted sex offender, and the charts are picture perfect NDI with no signs of countermeasures. But the examiner “has a feeling” something isn't right, and decides to pray on it overnight. Say the examiner has a vision (in a dream) and the perceived message from on high is that the test subject is indeed deceptive... What then? Is the polygrapher obligated – at least ethically – to make mention of it in his report? Here's a larger question... Can religion – as evidenced by the polygraph professions' formal appeals to supernatural forces for assistance – coexist with “polygraph science”? By the way, whose religion should the polygraph industry be talking about? The invocations I've heard were decidedly Christian in nature. What about other religions? Maybe they could have a rotation... Oh wait, then the Satanists would want to get in on the act, and that would probably irk the polygraph establishment at large. Better come back to that later. How should the atheists be dealt with? And what about the courts? Polygraph-science proponents are eager to share the APA's meta-analysis. Can the same folks explain the industry's affinity for Divine Intervention? Let me be clear: I'm not knocking religion, anyone's beliefs, or any organization's religious leanings. I'm simply asking if religion should have such a formal place in an entity that espouses and promotes polygraph science. Hey, if polygraph were all about utility, no one would care about the religion angle. I've raised a few rhetorical and sensitive questions, to be sure, but they should be addressed. Let's hear some comments – especially from the polygraph industry lurkers who frequent this site.
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