Quote from: Zurren on Aug 13, 2003, 12:55 PMI didn't think my post would generate this kind of attention.
Well for whom cares, I practiced these countermeasures. I did so on a similar chair as the one I would be on and I practiced in front of a full body mirror. They can not physically be detected unless you really screw up. It was as if I was just sitting there motionless. Now the countermeasures effect was obviously (to me anyways) working on the machine also. How could I be asked the same questions and answer the same way but have a totally different result? Because they worked?
The machine can be beat. The machine has been beat. The machine beats both the right and the wrong people. These are lives that are being messed with here.

Quote from: Saidme on Aug 13, 2003, 11:19 AMYou're not getting off the hook that easy. If you're so hell bent on removing polygraph then you need to come up with an adequate solution/replacement.
Quote from: Saidme on Aug 12, 2003, 11:45 PMIf you're trying to make things better, than what's your answer to polygraph? What should we replace it with? Should we discontinue it's use until the George's of the world come up with something? I think not. I'll use it until something better comes along. We've got cases to resolve.

Quote from: Saidme on Aug 12, 2003, 10:46 PMSkeptic
Regarding specific issue testing (which is what I do). Your coveted NAS study (which I have no regard for) states something to the effect that specific issue testing is "far above chance" but less than perfect. Is far above chance 90%, 95%, 98%. I think I would take any one of those numbers to the bank. Let's even concede 85%, still pretty damn good.
QuoteCONCLUSION: Notwithstanding the limitations of the quality of the empirical research and the limited ability to generalize to realworld settings, we conclude that in populations of examinees such as those represented in the polygraph research literature, untrained in countermeasures, specific-incident polygraph tests can discriminate lying from truth telling at rates well above chance, though well below perfection.
QuoteLet me caveat this next statement so your co-horts don't take this out of context. The most recent (and more recent) shuttle disasters were horrendous. America lost a lot of great astronauts in both instances. The shuttle and the technology driving those shuttles is awesome. The people working on them are extraordinarily bright. Were the shuttles 100%? Obviously not. Would I volunteer to ride the next shuttle to space? In a heartbeat. Anytime you factor in the human element you've got room for error. Polygraph is no different. It's pretty damn good but face it, nothing's perfect.

Quote from: Saidme on Aug 12, 2003, 10:11 PMMuch like my credentials are questioned, I question the timing as well as the source of this and other sources.


Quote from: Saidme on Aug 12, 2003, 09:46 PMSkeptic/CC
Wow, my whole life's been transformed by this revelation. Maybe I'll just put my black box and snake oil away and join you and George and Gino and Drew. Sounds like a hell of a good time. NOT! I do have a question for Z. Why would you want to work for a place that's known as a "backwards hillbilly" place? Hmmm.![]()