Quote from: Marty on Sep 05, 2002, 07:10 PMYes, I quite agree. What choice does one have without diminishing one's own integrity.
QuoteAn offhand question about CQT's. Since it is often a felony to lie to federal LE persons, it seems that to pass a CQT requires one to lie to the control question whereas to fail presumes one lies to the relevent one. Catch 22.
Quote from: George W. Maschke on Sep 05, 2002, 06:44 PMYes, I quite agree. What choice does one have without diminishing one's own integrity.
Marty,
What I am saying, however, is that the kind of honesty you exhort is not likely to be rewarded, but rather to be punished.
Quote
... the advice you've given (which is similar to what we've termed the "complete honesty" approach in The Lie Behind the Lie Detector). If agencies like the CIA, FBI, and NSA were to waive the polygraph requirement for applicants and employees who admit to their knowledge of polygraphy, it would soon spell the end of polygraph screening: everyone would start doing so, and the polygraph house of cards would come tumbling down.
Quote from: George W. Maschke on Sep 05, 2002, 04:46 PM
But Marty's 3rd and 4th suggestions (that you explain to your polygrapher all the research you've done about polygraphy and that you'd be willing to take the "test" if the polygrapher could demonstrate that it works) is naive in the extreme and would likely be the kiss of death for any job applicant who attempted such.
QuotePersonally, what I would do is:
1: research other areas than the pro and anti polygraph web sites.
2. Try to find testing modalities that have some scientific basis. The so-called GKT comes to mind.
3. Explain to the examiner that you ran across these sites as a natural result of trying to understand what polygraphs are all about and,
4. that you are willing to take one provided they can demonstrate to you that they work. Then work out a mutually agreeable validation series.
Quote from: J.B. on Sep 05, 2002, 03:59 AM
Marty,
Even studies on the DLT do not prove knowledge will produce a false outcome.
Quote from: J.B. on Sep 05, 2002, 02:34 AM
skeptic711,
There is no known or published research that suggests that a persons knowledge of polygraph will cause them to produce a false positive, truthful person being deemed deceptive, or false negative, deceptive person being deemed truthful.