Quote from: Sergeant1107 on Oct 31, 2007, 08:09 PMIt is also interesting to note that in the APA's response to the National Academy of Sciences research study, they dismissively write that the NAS study only used 57 of the more than 1000 studies available. The implication is that the NAS did not avail itself of the bulk of the available research.
In their statement touting the accuracy of the polygraph, the APA cites 80 of the more than 1000 studies available...
The clear message, as absurd as it sounds, is that 57/1000 is a shoddy job of research, but 80/1000 is acceptable.
Quote from: Barry_C on Oct 31, 2007, 04:39 PMI
Real answer: There are all kinds of studies in there - apples and oranges and pears. You have to look inside the book to start crunching the numbers. Some of those field studies are suspect, in my opinion. For example, one study resulted in 100% accuracy (the technique's author / creator conducted the study). (Before you go too crazy though, the NAS report included that study, which means it somehow "made the cut.")
Quote from: Barry_C on Oct 31, 2007, 04:39 PM
If the opposite is true, then lab studies are more accurate than field studies; yet, lab studies are "bunkum." That makes perfect sense.

QuoteThe APA is trying to convince the public that field testing research produces higher accuracy than lab studies, whereas the converse is true. But lab studies are bunkum.