Quote from: Marty on Oct 19, 2002, 08:13 PM
LOL
Please, never confuse the taste of blood for victory. Good luck, Skeptic.
-Marty

Quote from: Fair_Chance on Oct 19, 2002, 09:21 PM
Whoa Marty!
You have been very scientific and analytical about this webpage until this last posting.
You are adding a little bit of personal emotion to this last zinger.
Easy big Guy!
Quote from: Skeptic on Oct 19, 2002, 05:11 PM
Or perhaps I'm simply feeling fiesty and particularly unforgiving today.
Skeptic
QuoteIsn't Mark Zaid already doing this? I hope the NAS report gives him some fresh ammunition.
QuoteThis can, of course, work both ways. It's only because of the "polygraph mystique" that the public has condoned increased use of polygraph screening. If that mystique is shattered and faith in the polygraph is fingered as a national security liability, the tides can change very quickly.
QuoteIt should also be noted that, while the NAS did conclude that SI polygraphy has results "well above chance", it was still highly critical both of the quality and quantity of the research done on this and other issues, and of the generalizability of laboratory research to field work.
Quote from: Skeptic on Oct 19, 2002, 05:11 PM
I'm sure they see things this way. To my mind, however, such irrational conclusions indicate "incompetence", and more than that, a dereliction of duty.
Or perhaps I'm simply feeling fiesty and particularly unforgiving today.
Skeptic
Quote from: Marty on Oct 19, 2002, 04:53 PM
George,
It will be interesting to see if the class action attys will take this on. Since employment screening is pretty much limited to govt or govt mandated private sector programs, it won't be as attractive financially as other opportunities. I'm sure you will keep us informed about events here.
QuotePerhaps the political liabilities will be more productive, but in the wake of 9-11, cries of "national security" will provide cover given the widespread ignorance and belief in the workability of the polygraph extant.
QuoteImproving public polygraph "literacy" is the key factor facilitating the rest of this. This has the adverse consequence of likely reducing the tool's effectiveness as a criminal interrogation tool. Interrogations can be and are abused but the issue of corruption of investigative processes is quite broad and is not polygraph specific.
Quote from: Marty on Oct 19, 2002, 04:07 PM
Sadly it is not the result of incompetence. The polygraph community simply does not consider a high rate of false positives as "intolerable" but just as the cost of doing business. Obviously they don't take joy in it but see no alternative. The NAS report didn't say anything they didn't already know even if lawmakers and the general public may not have known.
-Marty
QuoteThe polygraph community simply does not consider a high rate of false positives as "intolerable" but just as the cost of doing business....
Quote from: Skeptic on Oct 19, 2002, 03:13 PMSadly it is not the result of incompetence. The polygraph community simply does not consider a high rate of false positives as "intolerable" but just as the cost of doing business. Obviously they don't take joy in it but see no alternative. The NAS report didn't say anything they didn't already know even if lawmakers and the general public may not have known.
Even if the current intolerable false-positive rates of candidate rejection (now well-known, thanks if nothing else to the NAS report) aren't incentive enough to stop polygraph screening--IMHO, a product of straightforward incompetence on the part of security personnel....
Skeptic