Quote from: SanchoPanza on Dec 26, 2007, 10:16 AMQuotedoes the deception used by polygraphers have a purpose?
First, what do you consider "deception"? It's not a crazy question. Do a little research, and you'll see that there is no consensus in the psychological literature as to how to define it (or a "lie").
Quote from: SanchoPanza on Dec 26, 2007, 10:16 AMQuote
According to the chaplain, the deception does not improve the accuracy of the exam itself but it "help[s] better identify the deceptive" in some unspecified manner. Now, why would it take two years to get that answer? I wonder.
Again, your intellectual laziness is apparent once again. Read the study. That is the finding. You may not like it, but that's what they found.
Quote from: SanchoPanza on Dec 26, 2007, 10:16 AM
I appreciate the "tell it like it is" approach to skirting issues, which is why I don't take offense with your passion - as ill informed as you are at times.
Quotedoes the deception used by polygraphers have a purpose?
Quote
According to the chaplain, the deception does not improve the accuracy of the exam itself but it "help[s] better identify the deceptive" in some unspecified manner. Now, why would it take two years to get that answer? I wonder.
QuoteAdditionally, I'm sure that thinking the practice is benign to the innocent helps you sleep at night, but it seems unlikely to be true. Think about it. Is the average person more or less likely to be honest when someone is actively trying to trick her?
Quoteafter numerous personal insults
Quote from: SanchoPanza on Dec 19, 2007, 07:19 PMQuoteQuestion. Where the report says that some of the subjects had the control questions "explained" and others didn't, is that talking about the nomal, B.S., deceptive "explanation" that polygraphers normally give? Or is it talking about a real, truthful, and in line with reality explanation on how the control questions really work?
If the former, that is very strong evidence that the subject needs to be deceived in order to produce accurate results (and thus that people who know the truth will produce charts that are little better than chance). If the later, it should convince you polygraphers to cut the crap and be truthful with people since it won't harm accuracy and will lead fewer innocent people to try countermeasures.
What you'd find if you were to read the study is that your "BS" approach does nothing for the truthful, which is why I've told you time and again, it's unnecessary. Don't mistake that with useless, however, as they found that it does help better identify the deceptive. Now that your house of cards has fallen, will you be honest or will you continue spewing your unsupported theories (that are contradicted by Dr. Rovner's work)?
By the way, why do you have such a problem with the way some examiners introduce the CQTs? You act as if you are the ethics police. Is is wrong when researchers "mislead" their subjects during an experiment?
QuoteQuestion. Where the report says that some of the subjects had the control questions "explained" and others didn't, is that talking about the nomal, B.S., deceptive "explanation" that polygraphers normally give? Or is it talking about a real, truthful, and in line with reality explanation on how the control questions really work?
If the former, that is very strong evidence that the subject needs to be deceived in order to produce accurate results (and thus that people who know the truth will produce charts that are little better than chance). If the later, it should convince you polygraphers to cut the crap and be truthful with people since it won't harm accuracy and will lead fewer innocent people to try countermeasures.
Quote from: SanchoPanza on Dec 16, 2007, 11:40 AMOkay, someone who has had polygraph training please confirm or discredit the following information. In TLBLD, George states:
"The dirty little secret behind the polygraph "test" is that while the
polygrapher admonishes the examinee to answer all questions truthfully,he secretly assumes that denials in response to certain questions—called "control" questions—will be less than truthful."
He also states:
"The polygrapher scores the test by comparing physiological responses
(breathing, blood pressure, heart, and perspiration rates)
to these probable-lie control questions with reactions to relevant
questions such as, "Did you ever use an illegal drug?" If the former
reactions are greater, the examinee passes; if the latter are greater,
he fails. If responses to both "control" and relevant questions are
about the same, the result is deemed inconclusive."
Are these statements true?
Quote from: skip.webb on Dec 14, 2007, 03:35 PMFor thise unfamiliar with Springer the link is
http://www.springerlink.com/content/7x837227611x7734
It's quite interesting, but I will be very surprised if Mr. Maschke posts a copy on this site. Since it is so unlikely that it will appear here, I would like to say that Mr' Webb's summary is quite accurate. But if you are curious, it is worth the money.
Sancho Panza

Quote from: SanchoPanza on Dec 16, 2007, 11:40 AMOkay, someone who has had polygraph training please confirm or discredit the following information. In TLBLD, George states:
"The dirty little secret behind the polygraph "test" is that while the
polygrapher admonishes the examinee to answer all questions truthfully,he secretly assumes that denials in response to certain questions—called "control" questions—will be less than truthful."
He also states:
"The polygrapher scores the test by comparing physiological responses
(breathing, blood pressure, heart, and perspiration rates)
to these probable-lie control questions with reactions to relevant
questions such as, "Did you ever use an illegal drug?" If the former
reactions are greater, the examinee passes; if the latter are greater,
he fails. If responses to both "control" and relevant questions are
about the same, the result is deemed inconclusive."
Are these statements true?
Quote
Every now and then, when I hear some of the musing that comes forth about David Lykken and what he would think, I feel a bit like Lloyd Bentsen listening to Dan Quayle speak about JFK. David and others have spoken about the weaknesses of probable lie control question tests (PLCQTs) in largely two contexts.
One is "What is the proper way (environment) to analyze witchcraft?" consideration. Within this context, issues of a lack of external validity with laboratory studies and the discarding of data points (the discarding of false positive polygraph results (obviously) not followed by confessions) with confession-based (i.e., ground truth determined through confessions) real case studies come into play. Both of these phenomena make questionable the results of any studies so impacted. These considerations are however not at the core of the more serious shortcoming of this practice.
As has been said time and time again quite eloquently by John Furedy, the probable-lie control question test neither contains any form of scientific control nor resembles any sort of recognizable test. It is centered on a roughly 30 minute to hour and a half unstandardized interview. The interview has several purposes, some largely unrelated to the administration of the test (e.g., collection of demographic data) and at least one serious and universal confound (developing theme material to be used in an interrogation of a subsequently found to be deceptive examinee following the in-test phase) but largely focuses on the "setting" of control questions in relationship to relevant questions. This is a vague notion and has no objective measures for ascertaining whether examiner lies regarding question types are believed by the examinee nor more generally whether this "setting" has been accomplished.
As previously stated, this witchcraft is further characterized by being unstandardized. Every test is different. One hundred exams (more specifically the pre-test interviews) given to 100 examinees about the same specific incident are all different. Any two exams about the same issue given to the same person are different. As opposed to the ability to give tape-recorded instructions and an administered test with a guilty knowledge test, the currently practiced PLCQT is nothing more than an unstanderdized interview administered differently by every examiner on every occasion. This may be poor art but it is most assuredly not good science.
I believe it is in regard to this latter set of considerations that David was referring when he said that which is quoted on the home page, "...the theory and methods of polygraphic lie detection are not rocket science, indeed, they are not science at all."