
Quote from: AnalSphincter on Feb 28, 2005, 03:49 PMYes, I'd have to concur with regard to voice stress analysis. I think if George really wanted to help society (since Lykken says no good can come to society by trying to deceive polygraphers) he'd be renaming this site AntiVoiceStress.org. Then he'd actually be attacking something with no credibility.
QuoteNo good social purpose can be served by inventing ways of beating the lie detector or deceiving polygraphers. As Fay's prison example shows, the most avid students of such developments would be professional criminals rather than the innocent suspects and the truthful job applicants who now fall victim to the trust that we Americans invest in this technology. (On the other hand, if I were somehow forced to take a polygraph test in relation to some important matter, I would certainly use these proven countermeasures rather than rely on the truth and my innocence as safeguards; an innocent suspect has nearly a 50:50 chance of failing a CQT administered under adversarial circumstances, and those odds are considerably worse than those involved in Russian roulette.)
Quote from: AnalSphincter on Feb 28, 2005, 03:49 PMYes, I'd have to concur with regard to voice stress analysis. I think if George really wanted to help society (since Lykken says no good can come to society by trying to deceive polygraphers) he'd be renaming this site AntiVoiceStress.org. Then he'd actually be attacking something with no credibility.
Quote from: AnalSphincter on Feb 27, 2005, 01:55 PMYou both need to read my challenge again. It has nothing to do with setting up an exam with either of you. I'm looking for people who actually lied to a relevant issue on a polygraph and then overcame their lies through countermeasures. Are you both admitting that you fit that profile? If so, 'fess up.
Quote from: AnalSphincter on Feb 27, 2005, 02:53 PMExactly. How else are we to believe that countermeasures extolled on this site actually work?Anecdotal evidence provided by anonymous persons in response to your challenge will not provide genuine evidence that countermeasures work, just as anecdotal claims by polygraphers to have detected countermeasures do not prove that polgyraphers are able to detect countermeasures at better-than-chance levels.
QuoteInnocent examinees don't need countermeasures.The finding of the National Acamedy of Sciences that polygraph screening is without validity does not support this assertion.
QuoteFor innocent examinees to say that they passed their exam because of countermeasures is like saying that the fizz in carbonated beverages keeps you from getting cancer because the cancer cells are expelled in burps. Silly, silly, silly.It is true that an innocent person who employs countermeasures and subsequently passes a polygraph examination cannot know for sure that the countermeasures were resonsible for his/her passing. But the same is also true with regard to the guilty person who employs countermeasures and passes. He/she cannot truly know whether or not he/she might have also passed absent the use of countermeasures.
QuoteYou dispense a placebo, George, nothing more.While you assert this to be the case, you have not presented any compelling evidence or argument for such. An understanding CQT procedure, as well as peer-reviewed research, strongly suggests that augmentation of reactions to the "control" questions to increase one's chances of passing is more than just a "placebo."
Quote from: NSAreject2 on Feb 25, 2005, 01:54 PM"You correctly characterize interrogation as a blend of lying, manipulation, and sometimes aggression"
AS,
If the polygraph was so accurate, then why do the
above techniques need to be employed ? The
polygraph is used as only an intimidation tool, which is
supplimented by the above behaviors. Also, how do
you explain the fact that the DoD DIS (Defense
Investigative Service) does not look at the actual
poly results from NSA (DIA, etc.), but just what the
person was tricked into admitting ?