Quote from: Brandon Hall on Aug 07, 2005, 02:37 PMNonombre,
I suppose the deception on the examiner's part would be the lack of full disclosure about the test. Do you explain to your examinee's that you will be asking a series of questions in the in-test, however only certain questions will be scored while the remainder is filler? A naive examinee believes all questions to hold the same importance, even the ridiculous, "Are the lights on in this room?" for example....

Quote from: Brandon Hall on Aug 07, 2005, 04:47 AMNonombre,
I believe the notion that the polygrapher is the deceiver is derived from the fact that the test is only partially explained to the examinee. If the test were to be explained in whole, the examinee would certainly have a much better idea of how the test functions. As examinees we are told to never hold anything back and provide full explanation and complete truth. However, if an examinee does so then the test is unable to function as proposed. Therefore deception on the examiners part is crucial in an attempt to make the examinee believe the test is actually accurate in detecting deception.
Quote from: Drew Richardson on Aug 05, 2005, 09:55 AMNonombre,
Perhaps in my absence and prior to my fully answering your question (there is a general approach for all examinees and a different targeted approach for those who would seek to insure non-deceptive charts while being "guilty" (beat the test) vs. those who are innocent (overcome the inherent error associated with this form of testing) with an RI exam--I will discuss only the latter of the two targeted approaches for obvious reasons), you might address the issues I raised. You suggested an examinee should freely discuss his concerns with his examiner. I have stated that "lie detection" is about deception and that the initial (perhaps only) deceiver (the examiner) should not be trusted nor sought out for advice. I have given several examples of this type of deception (https://antipolygraph.org/forum/index.php?topic=255.msg1214#msg1214 ). Would you comment on these areas that I have labeled as misrepresentation, falsification, exaggeration, outright deception, etc. Would you agree that they are? If not, why not, and if so, in light of this behavior why would you suggest any examinee should make himself/herself vulnerable to such an examiner through the sharing of problems and confidences? Regards,
Quote
Nonombre,
The fact that the control is missing in the so-called probable-lie control question test (PLCQT) does not make lack of scientific control a virtue. The RI technique was completely discredited (and is currently held in disdain by the handful of serious academics who support specific incident polygraphy) because quite apart from the issue of and any application of countermeasures, the test has no validity whatsoever and amounts to little more than the asking of a number of obvious (to everyone) hot button items that anybody and everybody would respond to for any number of reasons quite apart from deception. If you administer such a test you should be ashamed. With regard to choosing whether to apply countermeasures, that is a decision in the purview of each examinee. I would not question an examinee's decision to either apply or refrain from applying countermeasures. I would question the sanity of any examinee that is familiar with this site and TLBTLD and who chooses to discuss his problems and concerns with a polygrapher. Your business is about deception (see my considerably earlier post: https://antipolygraph.org/forum/index.php?topic=255.msg1214#msg1214 for a description of this routine deception as displayed in a CQT exam) and a deceiver is neither to be trusted nor sought out as an adviser.
Quote from: George W. Maschke on Aug 03, 2005, 03:47 AMThe methodology used in the Relevant/Irrelevant technique is addressed at p. 177 ff. of the 4th edition of The Lie Behind the Lie Detector and a countermeasure approach is discussed at p. 151.
Quote from: nonombre on Aug 03, 2005, 11:16 PMNonombre,
Dr. Richardson,
So if faced with a requirement to take an RI polygraph examination, how does one ensure he will in all cases "beat" the test?" How would you do it?
Nonombre
:-/
Quote from: Drew Richardson on Aug 03, 2005, 11:07 PMNonombre,
The fact that the control is missing in the so-called probable-lie control question test (PLCQT) does not make lack of scientific control a virtue. The RI technique was completely discredited (and is currently held in disdain by the handful of serious academics who support specific incident polygraphy) because quite apart from the issue of and any application of countermeasures, the test has no validity whatsoever and amounts to little more than the asking of a number of obvious (to everyone) hot button items that anybody and everybody would respond to for any number of reasons quite apart from deception. If you administer such a test you should be ashamed. With regard to choosing whether to apply countermeasures, that is a decision in the purview of each examinee. I would not question an examinee's decision to either apply or refrain from applying countermeasures. I would question the sanity of any examinee that is familiar with this site and TLBTLD and who chooses to discuss his problems and concerns with a polygrapher. Your business is about deception (see my considerably earlier post: (https://antipolygraph.org/forum/index.php?topic=255.msg1214#msg1214 ) for a description of this routine deception as displayed in a CQT exam) and a deceiver is neither to be trusted nor sought out as an adviser.