Quote from: propoly2 on Mar 29, 2002, 01:11 PM
It's the polygrapher's fault if you failed and was honest with him. That's where the blame lies my friend.
It seems that the polygraphers form an opinion of you during the pre-poly interview, and if he didn't like you for whatever reason, he failed you.
Quote from: propoly2 on Mar 29, 2002, 01:11 PM
It's the polygrapher's fault if you failed and was honest with him. That's where the blame lies my friend.
It seems that the polygraphers form an opinion of you during the pre-poly interview, and if he didn't like you for whatever reason, he failed you.

Quote from: Propoly on Mar 28, 2002, 04:00 PM
As long as you're honest when the questioned is asked, you shouldn't have a problem.
QuoteRemember, the one and only way to pass the test is to tell the TRUTH.
QuoteIt's the polygrapher's fault if you failed and was honest with him. That's where the blame lies my friend.
QuotePropoly: Remember, the one and only way to pass the test is to tell the TRUTH.Hogwash. Peer-reviewed scientific research indicates otherwise. A 1994 study by Charles R. Honts, David C. Raskin, and John C. Kircher (Journal of Applied Psychology, 1994, Vol. 79, No. 2, 252-259) revealed that 50% of college students were able to beat an experienced examiner with only one-half hour of training (this training consisted of having instructions read to the subjects by graduate students). But the only way to pass is to tell the truth, right? Spoken like a true polygraph examiner angered at the fact this his fraudulent trade is being exposed.
QuoteWould that leave my final record with that department as "Appealed" as opposed to "failed poly"?