Quote from: micki on Apr 30, 2006, 04:06 PMThank you for your help!!
Quote from: micki on Apr 30, 2006, 01:56 PMHi everyone,
I originally started this post and all this language is way above my head...please could you "in simple language" answer my question...I would so appreciate it as I am just a single mom trying to protect my child from being molested once again...
Again my 3 yr old came back from seeing her bioligical father who she had not seen since a baby (judge awarded my twins go across the country to be with their "dad")....after 3 days of returning home, one twin came to me in great detail saying what "dad" did to her..going into great detail...I had her examined and have a DR. Report saying she is sexually damaged by a penis...not by falling off a bike et. Ex husb is military, claims he has Post Traumatic Stress, took the lie detector test and passed. Because he passed, police dropped the case...Ive had to hire a lawyer because I am fighting for the safety of my girls so they dont have to spen 3 wks with him this summer.
I am a desperate mom as I need to protect my children. Note, I have never left with my children alone with any man but their dad...how could a 3 yr old go into great detail as to what he did...where it happened etc. I was present during the police interview with her and my lawyer asked for a copy of the tape...it was erased because of the Privacy Act...So I need to do research on the following:
1. are military men trained to beat lie detector tests
2. can men with Post Traumatic Stress beat a lie detector test
3. can a sexual predator beat a lie detector test
4. can a pathological lier beat a lie detector test
5. can someone who is in denial beat a lie detector test
I have recieved some advice from a man on this forum (and am very grateful!), but I am open to whatever else advice I can get...
Again, please help me in the right direction...I need text book research on this for my lawyer as this is going to trial in mid June.
Thank you so much for your time....I really appreciate it!!!
Micki
QuoteYou have misunderstood or misrepresented the significance of my point. I was suggesting that the lack of external validity of simulated-crime studies underestimates the weakness (not the questionable strengths) of a CQT polygraph exam under realistic conditions, i.e., because innocent subjects do not have any fear of the consequences of being found wrongfully deceptive in a simulated crime scenario, the true rate of false positive outcomes is underestimated by such studies.
Please examine Drew Richardson's post...
Quote from: detector1012000 on Apr 29, 2006, 11:57 PMOnesimus, thanks for the verification that admissions are made when deception, for what ever cause, is detected.
Quote from: detector1012000 on Apr 29, 2006, 11:57 PMOnesimus, thanks for the verification that admissions are made when deception, for what ever cause, is detected.
Quote from: detector1012000 on Apr 29, 2006, 08:22 PMPlease examine Drew Richardsons post, it clearly states the problem with the "Scientific Research" in the polygraph arena, it is all laboratory research which has no scientific validity because it is not "Real Life" research, only laboratory. Those of us in the industry have conducted studies regarding admissions after obtaiing reactions indicitave of deception. Those figures give us 98% correct calls on deception. That my friend is real life. How many pass while telling lies? I have no idea so cannot give any reliable estimate of figure.
Regarding concern about false positivies. When a polygrapher detects deception, further investigation is necessary if admissions are not obtained. (Personal Opinion not held by all departments or examiners)
Quote from: detector1012000 on Apr 29, 2006, 08:22 PMPlease examine Drew Richardsons post, it clearly states the problem with the "Scientific Research" in the polygraph arena, it is all laboratory research which has no scientific validity because it is not "Real Life" research, only laboratory. Those of us in the industry have conducted studies regarding admissions after obtaiing reactions indicitave of deception. Those figures give us 98% correct calls on deception. That my friend is real life. How many pass while telling lies? I have no idea so cannot give any reliable estimate of figure.
Regarding concern about false positivies. When a polygrapher detects deception, further investigation is necessary if admissions are not obtained. (Personal Opinion not held by all departments or examiners)
Quote from: detector1012000 on Apr 29, 2006, 08:22 PMThose of us in the industry have conducted studies regarding admissions after obtaiing reactions indicitave of deception. Those figures give us 98% correct calls on deception. That my friend is real life.
Quote from: LieBabyCryBaby on Apr 28, 2006, 02:06 PMNow, what these studies show is that, while countermeasures may increase false negative outcomes (guilty suspects classified as "innocents"), they have absolutely no effect on innocent examinees.
Quote
Now, what these studies show is that, while countermeasures may increase false negative outcomes (guilty suspects classified as "innocents"), they have absolutely no effect on innocent examinees. (Ben-Shakhar, G. "A critical review of the control questions test." Handbook of Polygraph Testing. Academic Press, 2002.)