Quote from: Gordon H. Barland on Jul 06, 2001, 01:17 AM
By "dummied up" I meant pretending not to know something which in fact you do know. My decision not to discuss how we detect countermeasures was something quite different....
Quote...just a word or two about your phrase "dummied up." I presume this phrase is not an intentional pejorative, but merely your shorthand for describing one alternative available to Chuck, i.e., a decision not to reveal information based on a rational thought process. This process is, in fact, not unlike your decision not to fully discuss counter-countermeasures and, of course, may or may not be the correct decision, but is in no way intuitively a dumb decision.
QuoteI suspect it would be extremely difficult to tell from further investigation (i.e., to prove a negative) that (1) Chuck never disembarked from the subway in non-approved areas and (2) that he never had unauthorized contact with foreign nationals. The point being there exists the possibility that there may have been a false negative result with either the first or second exam
QuoteThe fact that the procedure is not a test, but an unstandardizable interrogatory interview, means that its accuracy is not empirically, but only rhetorically, or anecdotally, evaluatable. That is, one can state accuracy figures only for a given examiner interacting with a given examinee, because the CQT [as well as the relevant/irrelevant format, which might have been used in your Berlin case] is a dynamic interview situation rather than a standardizable and specifiable test.Your description of the polygraphic interrogations to which Chuck was subjected as "tests" is incorrect from a scientific standpoint, and this fundamental conceptual error invites systematic error in analyzing polygraphy.