Quote from: Drew Richardson on Feb 16, 2005, 04:10 PMA.S.
You write:
An examinee does not simultaneously face both circumstances (most unusual if such were the case) in the setting of a given polygraph examination, and he is not faced with such a judgment, i.e., choosing the greater of the two perils. He will face one or the other (or some modification thereof) depending on whether taking a specific- incident criminal exam or an applicant/employee-screening exam. The dynamic of such will likely make this the issue of the greatest immediate interest and threat and here lies the rub. This is the case for both deceptive and non-deceptive examinees (i.e., the threat of jail time or non-employment is a threat for both), far outweighs the threat associated with the relatively obvious control material and associated consequences in a PLCQT exam, is the crux of the theoretical flaw of such testing in both applications, and will undoubtedly lead to false positive outcomes for both.
Quote...Jail for 10 years vs. looking for another job . . . I think it's obvious which one is the greater threat....
I like that sarcastic wit. Reminds me of myself.




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