Quote...there is a known sensitivity and specificity for polygraph that has been established and proven through peer-reviewed scientific research.
Quote
If the sensitivity and specificity of CQT polygraphy are not known (and, as you admit, not likely to be known in the foreseeable future), then is it not a fraud on the court for any polygrapher to testify, based on analysis of the charts collected during a CQT polygraph examination, as to the probablity of a subject's having been deceptive?
QuoteTo answer your question as best I can, I know of no official government statistic regarding sensitivity and specificity. I doubt that one exists, nor is likely to exist in the foreseeable future. A lot depends on the situation in which the CQT is used, e.g. a single issue criminal examination versus a multi-issue screening examination.
QuoteThe probabilities cited in the Nicholson case refer to how Nicholson's reactions compared to the total number of verified truthful and deceptive sets of charts in the data base used by that particular algorithm.
Quote from: J.B. on Apr 13, 2002, 01:09 AMThe "mathematical certainty", as you so call, is a computerized score based on confirmed polygraph data. The data collected is then compared to the known data to arrive at a 'probability', not 'certainty', of deception, inconclusive, or truthfull.
QuoteCan you define your question more precisely?
QuotePolygraphs
10. On or about October 16, 1995, and October 20, 1995, NICHOLSON underwent polygraph examinations administered by CIA polygraphers as part of his routine security update. A computerized review the examination results indicated a .97 (out of 1.0) probability of deception on two questions: (1) Are you hiding involvement with a Foreign Intelligence Service? and (2) Have you had unauthorized contact with a Foreign Intelligence Service? During one of the examinations, a CIA polygrapher deemed NICHOLSON's response "inconclusive" to the following question: "Are you concealing contact with any Foreign Nationals?"
11. On or about December 4, 1995, NICHOLSON underwent a third polygraph examination administered by a CIA polygrapher. A computerized review of the examination revealed an .88 probability of deception on the following questions: (1) Since 1990, have you had contact with a Foreign Intelligence Service that you are trying to hide from the CIA? and (2) Are you trying to hide any contact with a Foreign Intelligence Service since 1990? The CIA examiner noted that NICHOLSON appeared to be trying to manipulate the test by taking deep breaths on the control questions, which stopped after a verbal warning.
(emphasis added)
QuoteWith this commonsense understanding of "deception" in mind, what is the sensitivity and specificity of CQT polygraphy for the detection (or inference, if you will) of deception (i.e., whether a person has answered a question truthfully)?
QuoteAs to whether the polygraph detects deception, there seems to be a problem with semantics. While the polygraph measures arousal rather than deception per se, this does not mean that the polygraph technique does not detect deception. The evidence for deception is indirect, not direct. In a sense, it is analagous to determining the presence of a subatomic particle by the trail it leaves behind in a cloud chamber in a physics lab, since the particle cannot be seen directly.
QuotePragmatically, in a criminal investigation when the examiner concludes that a person is DI, absent any verifiable explanation by the subject to the contrary, the most reasonable explanation as to why the person responded as he did is that the person was being deceptive. Decades of research involving mock crimes supports that these decisions are accurate at levels far above chance. As with any inference or any diagnostic procedure, there is always the possibility of error.
QuoteIf the person knows he is being completely truthful regarding the relevant questions, but has doubts as to whether he can be completely truthful when answering the comparison questions with a simple "No," he tends to react more to the comparison questions than the controls. They serve to protect against that cause of false positive errors.
QuoteThat is, how can the polygrapher distinguish between the anxious but truthful subject and the anxious and deceptive subject?
QuoteThe polygraph does not detect deception per se, for as you have often stated, there is no such thing as a lie response, a response which occurs only when a person lies, and never under any other circumstance. The human body just isn't built that way. The polygraph records any short term physiological arousal to the questions. A decision of "deception indicated" is an inference, based upon the elimination of other sources of reactions. To the extent that the examiner can so structure the testing environment to control extraneous responses, the decisions are likely to be accurate.
QuoteOne of the primary sources of reactions is when the subject may be answering the question truthfully in the literal or technical sense, i.e., he is not a spy, and yet the question makes him think of something specific he has decided not to tell the examiner (such as "In order to impress her, I told my girl friend about a classified project I worked on")....
Quote...The polygraph examiner cannot distinguish between a lie of commision ("No") and a lie of omission ("No, but....") because the body itself does not make that distinction....
QuoteAs long as the question causes the person to think of something specific every time it is asked, he will react to the question. The associated thoughts being concealed often do not rise to the level of disqualifying an applicant from employment or an employee from continued employment, yet you advise people to make no admissions whatsoever relating to the relevant questions. This makes it more difficult for the person in that type of situation to be cleared on the polygraph, for the examiner is unable to reword the question to remove that source of reaction. I believe your advice ill-serves the many people who face that dilemma.
QuoteAs for your question about the sensitivity and specificity of the polygraph in detecting deception, a lot depends upon your definition of deception. When they are intended to make yourself look better than you actually are, as in the example of the girl friend, do you consider deliberate omissions to be deception? I believe most psychologists who study deception do. This concept is one of the key issues in defining true versus false positives.
QuotePolygraph examinations are purported to detect deception, not spies per se. What is the sensitivity and specificity of CQT polygraphy for the detection of deception?
Quote from: Gordon H. Barland on Apr 01, 2002, 08:22 PM
Fred F. wrote that the polygraph missed Ames, Montes, and Lee.
Fred, I've got a question for you: Ames and Montes continued to spy after their polygraph exams; in my book the polygraph process missed them. You included Lee in with them. Is it your opinion Lee was a spy and he passed the polygraph, or that he was not a spy and the polygraph branded him a liar?
Peace,
Gordon
