QuoteBTW I'm still waiting and have been waiting for months for you to provide any citation at all for the alleged Zimbardo quote you use for a signature line.
QuoteAs far as the polygraph being accepted as science in Kansas education, in the second episode of "Discovering Psychology," which is a semester long psychology video series used in community colleges to teach introductory psychology across Kansas, host Dr. Philip Zimbardo describes the polygraph as the type of pseudo-science which educated persons must reject. Kansas social science students are learning that the polygraph is pseudo-science. To the contrary, Kansas criminal justice students are learning (from lectures by polygraph examiners) that the polygraph is 85-95 percent accurate as a lie-detector.
Quote from: SanchoPanza on Nov 01, 2008, 05:12 PMQuote from: PhilGainey on Nov 01, 2008, 04:29 PMIn this case, you tried to confuse conquistador (about to take the polygraph) about the employment of CMs, by cited a reference, and claiming it contained evidence which it didn't.Luckily, conquistador didn't all for it.
You know what, I clarified that post and provided full quote and citation. They say what they say. They are word for word quotes with accurate citations. Conquistador can read them before he fails his test or after. You guys are always paying lip service that what you are trying to do is help the innocent pass their polygraph exams by cheating. But none of you encouraged him to tell the truth and none of you bothered to ask why he thought he would need help passing the test. He could be attempting to conceal a criminal history. You didn't ask because you just don't really care. You didn't hesitate, you just coached him in counter-measures.
BTW I'm still waiting and have been waiting for months for you to provide any citation at all for the alleged Zimbardo quote you use for a signature line.
Sancho Panza
Quote from: PhilGainey on Nov 01, 2008, 04:29 PMIn this case, you tried to confuse conquistador (about to take the polygraph) about the employment of CMs, by cited a reference, and claiming it contained evidence which it didn't.Luckily, conquistador didn't all for it.
QuoteAuthors such as Maschke and Williams suggest that effective countermeasure strategies can be easily learned and that a small amount of practice is enough to give examinees an excellent chance of "beating" the polygraph. Because the effective application of mental or physical countermeasures on the part of examinees would require skill in distinguishing between relevant and comparison questions, skill in regulating physiological response, and skill in concealing countermeasures from trained examiners, claims that it is easy to train examinees to "beat" both the polygraph and trained examiners require scientific supporting evidence to be credible. However, we are not aware of any such research.
QuoteI just pointed it out because you and others here often engage in documentary archeology digging through tomes rather than tombs seeking scraps that support your preconceived notions about polygraph.
QuoteExcuse me the complete quote should be
Quote:
Some examinees who have not committed crimes, security breaches, or related offenses, or who have little to hide, might nevertheless engage in countermeasures with the intent to minimize their chances of false positive test results (Maschke and Scalabrini, no date). This strategy is not risk-free for innocent examinees. There is evidence that some countermeasures used by innocent examinees can in fact increase their chances of appearing deceptive (Dawson, 1980; Honts, Amato, and Gordon, 2001). Also, several agencies that use the polygraph in screening job applicants or current employees have indicated that examinees who are judged to be using countermeasures may, on these grounds alone, be subject to the same personnel actions that would result from a test that indicated deception The Polygraph and Lie Detection (2003) National Academy of Sciences
Board on Behavioral, Cognitive, and Sensory Sciences and Education (BCSSE)
Committee on National Statistics (CNSTAT) PG 140
QuoteIt is dishonest to cite the NAS report to support the notion that the kinds of countermeasures outlined in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector increase the risk of a truthful person being wrongly found deceptive. As discussed previously on this board, the foregoing passage refers to a study by Honts and Amato of the use of spontaneous (that is, untrained) countermeasures. See, Honts, C.R., S.L. Amato, and A.K. Gordon, "Effects of spontaneous countermeasures used against the comparison question test." Polygraph Vol. 30 (2001), No. 1, pp. 1-9.
In this study, the "countermeasures" were things that subjects ignorant of polygraph procedure did on their own in the belief that it might help them pass the polygraph. Such countermeasures are not comparable to those suggested in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.
With regard to the 1980 study by Michael E. Dawson ("Physiological Detection of Deception: Measurement of Responses to Questions and Answers During Countermeasure Maneuvers," Psychophysiology 17 (1), 8–17), as explained in the article abstract: "All subjects were trained in the Stanislavsky method of acting and were instructed to use this method to appear innocent on the polygraph test." Again, this is nothing at all like the countermeasures suggested in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.
Simply put, there is no evidence to support the counterintuitive notion that countermeasure use as a rule increases the risk of a false positive outcome.
QuoteI just pointed it out because you and others here often engage in documentary archeology digging through tomes rather than tombs seeking scraps that support your preconceived notions about polygraph.
QuoteExcuse me the complete quote should be
Quote:
Some examinees who have not committed crimes, security breaches, or related offenses, or who have little to hide, might nevertheless engage in countermeasures with the intent to minimize their chances of false positive test results (Maschke and Scalabrini, no date). This strategy is not risk-free for innocent examinees. There is evidence that some countermeasures used by innocent examinees can in fact increase their chances of appearing deceptive (Dawson, 1980; Honts, Amato, and Gordon, 2001). Also, several agencies that use the polygraph in screening job applicants or current employees have indicated that examinees who are judged to be using countermeasures may, on these grounds alone, be subject to the same personnel actions that would result from a test that indicated deception The Polygraph and Lie Detection (2003) National Academy of Sciences
Board on Behavioral, Cognitive, and Sensory Sciences and Education (BCSSE)
Committee on National Statistics (CNSTAT) PG 140
QuoteIt is dishonest to cite the NAS report to support the notion that the kinds of countermeasures outlined in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector increase the risk of a truthful person being wrongly found deceptive. As discussed previously on this board, the foregoing passage refers to a study by Honts and Amato of the use of spontaneous (that is, untrained) countermeasures. See, Honts, C.R., S.L. Amato, and A.K. Gordon, "Effects of spontaneous countermeasures used against the comparison question test." Polygraph Vol. 30 (2001), No. 1, pp. 1-9.
In this study, the "countermeasures" were things that subjects ignorant of polygraph procedure did on their own in the belief that it might help them pass the polygraph. Such countermeasures are not comparable to those suggested in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.
With regard to the 1980 study by Michael E. Dawson ("Physiological Detection of Deception: Measurement of Responses to Questions and Answers During Countermeasure Maneuvers," Psychophysiology 17 (1), 8–17), as explained in the article abstract: "All subjects were trained in the Stanislavsky method of acting and were instructed to use this method to appear innocent on the polygraph test." Again, this is nothing at all like the countermeasures suggested in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector.
Simply put, there is no evidence to support the counterintuitive notion that countermeasure use as a rule increases the risk of a false positive outcome.
Quote from: 7A7473721D0 on Oct 31, 2008, 10:49 PMThe false confessions produced by polygraph operator Art Roberts were cited by this commission as "but for" cause of the wrongful convictionTheir statements, which were later proven to be at least partially false were not in any way "confessions" as the term is used in the vernacular of criminal investigation.
QuoteGino, Were you even born when this case occurred? January 1969 wasn't it?No, I was not.
QuoteYou really shouldn't rely on the press for your research.
I don't think you can pin his wrongful conviction on polygraph either.
Quote from: 3A3433325D0 on Oct 13, 2008, 12:58 AMOne needs to look no further than than the wrongful conviction of David Milgaard to see what polygraph operators are capable of

Quote from: 4D766E61030 on Oct 11, 2008, 11:14 AMIt's too late for me. I took the polygraph knowing that I am innocent and to help the police rule me out so that they could get on with their investigation. I am now the prime suspect. I am just sick. They are now investigating me! I am crying all the time. I can hardly go to work. I need to tell my parents about this, but they are in their 80's and in poor health.....how can I burden them with this kind of worry? I AM TOO OLD AND SICK for this kind of man-made unnatural disaster! And I thought I suffered depression before.....looks like it's getting worse now. How "good" people can put the innocent through this is mind boggeling. Does the end justify the means? Hurting the innocent to get to the guilty? Oh My God....I can't believe this is happening to me. anguish
Quote from: 4D766E61030 on Oct 11, 2008, 11:14 AMIt's too late for me. I took the polygraph knowing that I am innocent and to help the police rule me out so that they could get on with their investigation. I am now the prime suspect. I am just sick. They are now investigating me! I am crying all the time. I can hardly go to work. I need to tell my parents about this, but they are in their 80's and in poor health.....how can I burden them with this kind of worry? I AM TOO OLD AND SICK for this kind of man-made unnatural disaster! And I thought I suffered depression before.....looks like it's getting worse now. How "good" people can put the innocent through this is mind boggeling. Does the end justify the means? Hurting the innocent to get to the guilty? Oh My God....I can't believe this is happening to me. anguish
