Gordon,
As promised, here are my thoughts on this subject...
As a preliminary matter, I note that Chuck's polygraph interrogations were not "tests" within the scientific meaning of the term. As Professor John J. Furedy of the University of Toronto notes in his article,
"The North American Polygraph and Psychophysiology: Disinterested, Uninterested, and Interested Perspectives" (International Journal of Psychophysiology, 21(1996): 2-3):
Quote:The fact that the procedure is not a test, but an unstandardizable interrogatory interview, means that its accuracy is not empirically, but only rhetorically, or anecdotally, evaluatable. That is, one can state accuracy figures only for a given examiner interacting with a given examinee, because the CQT [as well as the relevant/irrelevant format, which might have been used in your Berlin case] is a dynamic interview situation rather than a standardizable and specifiable test.
Your description of the polygraphic interrogations to which Chuck was subjected as "tests" is incorrect from a scientific standpoint, and this fundamental conceptual error invites systematic error in analyzing polygraphy.
As Anonymous pointed out, you do not provide enough information regarding the specific relevant question(s) Chuck was asked to say whether the outcome of his first polygraph interrogation was a false positive. If the relevant question was indeed, "Were you in East Berlin?" and Chuck replied, "No" when, in fact, he had been in East Berlin twice (passing through via the subway), then the polygrapher's opinion that Chuck was deceptive with regard to that question was correct, and no false positive occurred. Had the relevant question been "Were you in East Berlin within the past 48 hours" (and Chuck truly had not been there, or at least had no knowledge of having been there), then the polygrapher's opinion that Chuck had been deceptive with regard to that question would have been incorrect: a false positive determination. I think that the importance of the precise wording is obvious here.
You note that after Chuck passed his second polygraph interrogation after he admitted having twice passed under East Berlin via the subway. It should be noted that telling the truth is no guarantee that one will "pass" a polygraph "test." Chuck's admission may or may not have resulted in his passing his second polygraph interrogation. Had the polygrapher opined that Chuck was still being deceptive after his second "test," then his initial admission may have been used as the basis for disciplinary action against him. One cannot determine based on the available evidence whether or not Chuck was better off making the admission he made. (Personally, I think Chuck had an ethical duty to answer the relevant questions regarding his whereabouts truthfully, whether or not it was in his personal interest to do so. He did not, however, have an ethical duty to agree to have his truthfulness assessed based on a pseudoscientific polygraph "test.")
In
The Lie Behind the Lie Detector, Gino Scalabrini and I note in Chapter 4 that those submitting to polygraph screening "tests" who contemplate using countermeasures should prepare in advance some innocuous explanation (that cannot be turned into a damaging admission) for any physiological reactions the polygrapher may allege they showed with regard to the relevant questions. But as I observed in my post,
"How to Pass the DoD CI-Scope Polygraph," the Department of Defense Polygraph Program report for FY 2000 clearly shows that the
only persons who ultimately "failed" their counterintelligence-scope polygraph interrogations in that fiscal year were those who made "substantive admissions." This being the case, it is clearly in the interest of any person facing a DoD counterintelligence-scope polygraph "test" to "dummy up" (to borrow your expression) and
make no admissions. Any member of the U.S. armed forces who is asked/ordered to submit to a polygraph "test" with regard to a specific incident should seek legal counsel from the Judge Advocate General's office.