Quote from: George_Maschke on Mar 04, 2011, 09:59 AMI note that the WikiHow.org article, "How to Cheat a Polygraph Test (Lie Detector)" that was the original topic of this thread has now been viewed some 1,186,762 times:
http://www.wikihow.com/Cheat-a-Polygraph-Test-(Lie-Detector)
Quote from: LieBabyCryBaby on Aug 09, 2006, 12:33 PM
One thing that continually amuses me is how the "Very Senior" users and "Especially Senior" users have posted on this site hundreds of times--enough that they should have bored themselves to tears--yet they still hang around this site as if the whole world actually pays attention to them. That's the funny thing about internet forums, whether they be polygraph forums, religious forums, teen forums, game forums, etc.--the people who hang around those forums voicing their opinions devote so much of their own time and energy to the forum that they over-inflate the importance of the forum, thinking that the rest of the world is as focused on their daily drivel as they are. The fact is that the vast majority of examinees who undergo polygraph screening exams--suprise, surprise--PASS the exam. Compared to the number who pass the exam, the few disgruntled polygraph failures who pose as experts on this site are a TINY minority.
Quote from: quickfix on Aug 15, 2006, 05:22 PM I also find it strange that you advocate the abolishment of polygraph screening, but support its use in the criminal arena. Why does it work in one discipline, but not the other? Perhaps you could enlighten us on your theory.
Regards
Quote from: quickfix on Aug 15, 2006, 05:22 PMNothing has changed. My optimism remains the same for this profession (high), and my opinion remains the same that your assertions that polygraph screening is invalid and should be discontinued is baseless. You speak the words of a scientist, but offer little in the way of proof (no disrespect intended). It would explain why the Dep't of Energy went forward with their polygraph program, despite your advice to them not to. I also find it strange that you advocate the abolishment of polygraph screening, but support its use in the criminal arena. Why does it work in one discipline, but not the other? Perhaps you could enlighten us on your theory.
Regards
Quote
...Absolutely none of the dependent variable measures you mention nor the computerized data acquisition and various scoring algorithms are worth a tinker's damn as long as the basic application is flawed. The relationship between relevant and control/comparison question responses has no similarity to analyte and control in an assay with true scientific control. No tinkering with dependent variables, data transformations, scoring algorithms, etc. will improve the state of things until major (to include basic theoretical understanding) advances occur with the independent variable (basic paradigm) side of the equation....
Quote from: quickfix on Aug 12, 2006, 07:50 PMOn the same grounds that the US Senate dismissed his arguments in Sep 1997...This post seems to suggest that the U.S. Senate only makes well-reasoned, nonpartisan decisions that are well grounded in logic and science, which is why (in your opinion) they dismissed Drew's arguments.
Quote from: retcopper on Aug 14, 2006, 04:29 PMDigithead
I want to remind you that Brandeis wrote the "minority" opinion. Tell the surviviors of 911 that "the intrusion was in aid of law enforcement" I think you will find that they all support the tools at our disposal to fight terrorism. I forget which judge wrote the minorty opinion in Miranda but just like your minority opinion, so what.
Quote from: retcopper on Aug 14, 2006, 04:29 PMDigithead
I want to remind you that Brandeis wrote the "minority" opinion. Tell the surviviors of 911 that "the intrusion was in aid of law enforcement" I think you will find that they all support the tools at our disposal to fight terrorism. I forget which judge wrote the minorty opinion in Miranda but just like your minority opinion, so what.