Quote from: Saidme on Jul 16, 2003, 09:59 PMRead, skimmed, what's the difference! Examiner's tend to lose interest as soon as they see the bias involved. Not really brave, just a good dose of reality.
Quote from: Saidme on Jul 16, 2003, 11:55 AMYou are correct, I just skimmed it. Bullshit nevertheless.


Quote from: Saidme on Jul 15, 2003, 11:43 PMOnce again I will reiterate, I'm not concerned with the scientific validity of polygraph. I know as an investigative tool it works quite well. I don't have any study to back me up but I have 20+ years of law enforcement interviews and interrogations to back it up.
Quote...All this website does is (in my view) extend the length of the interrogation/interview but in the end we get the same results....

QuoteIf I'm not mistaken, the NAS did not seek any assistance from DODPI. I'm not 100% on that but I believe that to be the case. Maybe someone from DODPI could chime in on that.At least you qualified your comment
See page 324 of the NAS study. You will see that they did in fact contact DoDPI as they sought research materials.QuoteIs it your belief that no way, no how they could be biased?Absolutely. The members of the Committee which conducted the study consisted of 5 people in the Psychology/Psychiatry field, 6 in the Statistical, Cognitive and Social Sciences, 1 from the Law field, 1 from the Mathematics field, 1 Systems Engineer, 1 from the Radiology field and 1 person who is a language specialist. Quite a diverse group, and I doubt seriously they would all be sympathetic to the nuclear guys. Well, maybe the mathematician if his field is theoretical math.
QuoteWhat if the study were conducted by polygraph examiners? Would you find it flawed? Would you believe there could be bias? Of course you would.Absolutely again. But this analogy would only hold water if the NAS study had been conducted by the scientists employed by the DOE, which it was not.
Quote from: Saidme on Jul 15, 2003, 03:57 PMs-X-e
You wrote:
Based on the claims of many on this website, polygraph basically has no shred of validity. Why would you rely on past information provided by pro-polygraph organizations? Wouldn't it be more prudent to start from scratch.
QuoteIf a research team is going to draw conclusions from their study, shouldn't it be their study?
QuoteHow could they draw conclusions on other researchers information unless they duplicated the process.
QuoteI think you guys like to use the term empirical evidence. In fact I think they (NAS) cited one of the polygraph studies as "flawed." Was it flawed because they tried to duplicate the study? Unfortunately that wasn't the case.
Quote"The quality of studies varies considerably, but falls far short of what is desirable. Laboratory studies suffer from lack of realism, and in the randomized controlled studies focused on specific incidents using mock crimes, the consequences associated with lying or being judged deceptive almost never mirror the seriousness of these actions in real-world settings in which the polygraph is used. Field studies have major problems with identifying the truth against which test results should be judged. In addition, they suffer from problems associated with heterogeneity and lack of control of extraneous factors and more generally, they have lower quality than could be achieved with careful study design. Moreover, most of the research, in both the laboratory and in the field, does not fully address key potential threats to validity. For these reasons, study results cannot be expected to generalize to practical contexts."
QuoteIf I'm not mistaken, the NAS did not seek any assistance from DODPI. I'm not 100% on that but I believe that to be the case. Maybe someone from DODPI could chime in on that.
QuoteMost who fail know the answer. They were deceptive. I will concede there are a few exceptions to the rule. Nothing is 100%.
QuoteRegarding the scientists who conducted the study. Is it your belief that no way, no how they could be biased?
QuoteWhat if the study were conducted by polygraph examiners? Would you find it flawed? Would you believe there could be bias? Of course you would.
QuoteLet's not throw rocks about speculation. There's enough of that going on from both sides.
QuoteRegarding the study, I put no validity (there's that word again) in their findings. They didn't do any research. They regurgitated previously reported information.