does doug williams' book offer anything additional

Started by retest, Sep 06, 2003, 02:02 AM

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retest

I have read George's book at least 5 times.  Went to my test on Monday and used CM's.   Did alright except a few questions made me very nervous regarding computer use.  I could feel my heart pounding in my chest.  Does Doug's book help with that?  Scheduled for a retest next week

Saidme

I smell failure.  

George, I didn't think CM's were detectable? ;)

saidwho?

He did not say his cm's were detected, he said his heart was pounding, that is not a cm.  BTW, is there anything you can do when your pounding heart gives you away?

orolan

Saidme,
Are you saying now that if an examiner detects CM's a retest will be offered? How nice of you.
Sounds more like an "inconclusive" to me.
"Most of the things worth doing in the world had been declared impossible before they were done."
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis

Saidme

Saidwho (me :D)

Yeah, confess.

Orolan,  Probably setting him up for a nice post-test interview.  Aren't you part of the crowd that is convinced CM's aren't detectable? ;)

saidwho

so you are claiming that a rapidly beating heart is a CM then?  Geez, you polygraphers really DON'T know how to detect CM's....you're looking for the wrong thing!

Skeptic

Quote from: Saidme on Sep 08, 2003, 10:26 PMSaidwho (me :D)

Yeah, confess.

Which, of course, would hardly be necessary if the polygraph were reliable.

Confessions are everything.  Without them, the polygraph is worthless.

I guarantee you, Saidwho, that your heart will be beating a lot faster once you realize you've been duped into confessing to something...

Skeptic

orolan

Saidme,
Yes, I am part of that crowd that insists CM's can't be detected. That is irrelevant. What is relevant is the fact that you insist they are. So, when you "detect" them, do you offer a retest?
If the examiner in this case "detected" CM's, why waste time on another test? Why wasn't he disqualified on the spot?
"Most of the things worth doing in the world had been declared impossible before they were done."
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis

retest

is there a chance they did a retest because it was late in the day?  It was already 5:40 pm when they sent me home, maybe they just wanted to split?

Anyway I can counter a fast beating heart?  One thing I recognized for certain is that everything that came out of his mouth was total bullshit, I could see right through it, textbook

George W. Maschke

I don't know of any way to suppress an increase in heart rate except, perhaps, by taking a sedative. Remember, though, that the test is scored by comparing reactions to relevant versus "control" questions, and the key to "passing" is to produce stronger reactions to the latter.
George W. Maschke
I am generally available in the chat room from 3 AM to 3 PM Eastern time.
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Neo

Quote from: retest on Sep 06, 2003, 02:02 AM. . . Did alright except a few questions made me very nervous regarding computer use.  I could feel my heart pounding in my chest.  

 What caused you to be nervous?  Are there any concerns that were directly related to the relevant issues?

Neo

Skeptic

#11
Quote from: Neo on Sep 10, 2003, 12:22 PM

What caused you to be nervous?  Are there any concerns that were directly related to the relevant issues?

Neo

I can't speak for Retest, but when I took my polygraphs, I was quite nervous through the whole sessions (all three of them).  It had very little to do with "concerns about the relevant issues" and a lot to do with fear that I was going to be rejected from job candidacy, or worse, seen as a criminal.  The nervousness especially manifested itself on questions regarding serious crimes.

Perhaps this is something some of those in authority are blind to, but when an authority figure starts questioning you, it can be a tad nervewracking, regardless of whether you've done anything wrong.  I was brought up to respect authority figures, and I don't want them thinking bad things about me (perhaps irrational, but even so).

As I see it, this is one of the fundamental flaws in the polygraph -- especially as it seems to be used right now by certain agencies (Relevant/Irrelevant format).

Skeptic

Marty

#12
Quote from: Skeptic on Sep 10, 2003, 03:58 PM

I can't speak for Retest, but when I took my polygraphs, I was quite nervous through the whole sessions (all three of them).  It had very little to do with "concerns about the relevant issues" and a lot to do with fear that I was going to be rejected from job candidacy, or worse, seen as a criminal.

I think such dissonance induced nervousness is most likely when a poly knowledgable person is polygraphed since they are fully aware of the "science" behind the polygraph.

Facing a poly with significant false positive probability during an initial interview would be a deterent, but not an absolute one, in the decision to pursue a career requiring one. Facing a poly every 5 years would likley keep me from applying for such a job at all. I would be unwilling to embark on a career with significant probability for arbitrary termination.

-Marty
Leaf my Philodenrons alone.

Skeptic

Quote from: Marty on Sep 10, 2003, 04:30 PM

I think such dissonance induced nervousness is most likely when a poly knowledgable person is polygraphed since they are fully aware of the "science" behind the polygraph.

Facing a poly with significant false positive probability during an initial interview would be a deterent, but not an absolute one, in the decision to pursue a career requiring one. Facing a poly every 5 years would likley keep me from applying for such a job at all. I would be unwilling to embark on a career with significant probability for arbitrary termination.

-Marty

Marty,
You've nailed on the head the primary reason I withdrew my candidacy for the NSA position.

Skeptic

Skeptic

To clarify the above and to forestall the inevitable polygraph trolling, knowing about the polygraph's flaws before I took one is not something I can "blame" on Antipolygraph.org, since I'd learned about the shortcomings in my Psychology undergrad days.

Skeptic

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