Polygraph



A polygraph is a machine, or a test using said machine, which measures the changes in a person's body, such as pulse, breathing rate, and skin temperature. It is used as a lie detection test. It is based on the principle that when lying, one will become nervous and have an increased pulse and need for air. However, its effectiveness is very limited and the test often leads to inconclusive or incorrect results.

Validity of a polygraph
The polygraphy works by measuring some physiological responses to questions. The method involves establishing a "baseline" by measuring a subject's responses to certain undramatic and nonthreatening questions. Following this, the interview will take place and the measurements will be compared with this baseline. So from the method alone, it can be seen that the polygraph isn't so much a "lie detector" (as it is commonly portrayed) but just a system to measure someone's emotional state &mdash; the theory is that if someone lies, their emotional state will change. The method alone should suggest how people can produce false results or intentionally game the system in their favour. Sociopaths, for example, have a nervous system that responds differently: when they lie, they remain as cool as the proverbial cucumber. One in twenty-five people are sociopaths. However, the ubiquity of the "lie detector" means that it has been thoroughly studied, and rarely (even when used properly by trained individuals) produces favourable results. Many pieces of research show that either a polygraph is not a valid tool for use in courts, or that the validity is unmeasureable.

In short, just because someone is nervous doesn't mean they're lying, and just because someone is overconfident doesn't mean they're telling the truth. Moreover, people with anxiety disorders (such as social anxiety disorder or PTSD) may very well "fail" the polygraph due to being stressed and triggered during the test.

In 2002 the American Academy of Sciences called the Polygraph "a danger to national security", while John T Capiocco's Handbook of Psychophysiology states that "no spy has ever been identified as a result of a polygraph test". That statement technically isn't true, as the CIA did detect that Harold James Nicholson was spying due to a "failed" polygraph, but others weren't. In fact, Aldrich Ames (who was responsible for the deaths of at least ten American agents) "passed" two polygraphs.

Ways a polygraph test can give wrong results
If the simple act of taking a polygraph test makes a subject nervous then it will be difficult for the "baseline" to be established. This makes the readings during the real section of the interview almost impossible and this leads to "inconclusive" results. Although inconclusive results should be taken as just that, inconclusive, and therefore should be ignored, they may be interpreted as a sign of guilt &mdash; on the principle that honest and innocent people shouldn't be fearful of lie detector tests. However, this is wrong; the situation of taking "lie detector" tests is harrowing for many. Indeed, an honest person who is aware of the limitations of a polygraph may be even more nervous, since they may have a strong fear of false positives, leading to a self-fulfilling prophecy.

If a particular question makes the subject nervous, even as they give the correct, or honest, response, the test will give a "false" reading. In fact, one televised use of the polygraph for demonstration purposes showed the strongest reaction to the interviewer saying "now I'm going to ask you an intimate and personal question;" although a question of that nature was never asked, the mere thought of a harassing question sent the measurements quite wild.

It is important to note that most effects that cause the polygraph to be unreliable are invariant of whether a person is innocent or guilty, lying or telling the truth, intentionally trying to produce haphazard results or not.

Ways to "cheat" on a polygraph test
There are a few ways a polygraph can be "cheated". Not all of them are intentional.


 * If the subject doesn't realize they aren't telling the truth
 * If the subject doesn't naturally become nervous when lying (alternatively, becoming naturally nervous at everything works too: that corrupts the baseline)
 * If the subject trains themselves to remain calm while lying
 * If the subject simulates the physiological signals of lying when the questioner is establishing the baseline.

The last two are important as people can, and do, learn to do this knowing that they may be subject to a polygraph at some point. Before the actual questioning session begins, the polygraph technician leads the subject through a "pre-test" session. During this session, the technician asks the subject to answer a set of questions. The subject is asked to answer some questions truthfully, then lie when answering other questions. The technician then adjusts the polygraph to compensate for certain nervous reactions that the subject may have. Therefore intentionally cheating usually involves basically fooling around with this "pre-test" session.

To reduce the polygraph's reaction to nervousness &mdash; or lying &mdash; all the subject has to do is increase their nervousness during the truthful-answers portion of the pre-test. Among the more popular methods are:


 * Bite the side of your tongue
 * Tightly curl your toes
 * Count backwards from 10 to 1
 * Flex the anal sphincter

The subject must wait until the technician asks the question before doing any of these.

Polygraph Technician Training
About 15 weeks, with regular reclassification seminars. Just Google "Polygraph Training" and you'll find many training programs. None are properly accredited, of course. For comparison, it often takes six months to train to become a barber.

Use of polygraphs in a court of law
Currently, there is no US Supreme Court ruling of the admissibility of a polygraph for all cases. However, in Frye vs. the United States, the Supreme Court upheld a ruling denying the use of a polygraph as evidence in the case of Frye. The ruling included these words: "Just when a scientific principle or discovery crosses the line between the experimental and demonstrable stages is difficult to define. Somewhere in this twilight zone the evidential force of the principle must be recognized, and while courts will go a long way in admitting expert testimony deduced from a well-recognized scientific principle or discovery, the thing from which the deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs." However this ruling is from 1923. In the United Kingdom and in Ontario, Canada, polygraph evidence is inadmissible in a criminal court. Polygraph tests are inadmissible in most U.S. states in criminal prosecutions; some allow their admission if both the prosecution and the defense agree to it.

Use in employment
In the United States most private sector employees can not be forced to submit to a polygraph thanks to the In the private sector exceptions remain for people in security and certain pharmaceutical professions. The law does not cover government employees. Polygraphs remain in use largely in pre-screening for law enforcement and jobs in the intelligence community. Agencies can require that certain very high level security clearance applicants undergo a polygraph.

In the case of US intelligence communities they have effectively acknowledged the polygraph is not a viable truth telling technique. Despite this they have chosen to continue requiring polygraphs for the simple reason that people keep revealing things during a polygraph that they otherwise wouldn't. In other words it's proven an effective psychological manipulation tool for tricking those who don't understand the limits of polygraphs into giving up secrets. One can argue that engaging in psychological manipulation of your employees before they have even started their jobs is a bit harsh, but at least the government does have a justification for using pseudoscience this one time.

Use of polygraphs in popular entertainment
The entertainment industry is run by people who will believe almost anything for people who will believe almost anything, and even when they don't, many of them prefer entertainment over truth in their fiction. So naturally, the polygraph is a popular device on television, on stage, and in the movies. With the exception of police procedurals that portray the use of polygraphs, some of the more famous examples of polygraphs in entertainment are:

"Nada más que la verdad", a.k.a. "The Moment of Truth"
Nada más que la verdad ("Nothing But the Truth") was a Colombian TV game show series created by American TV producer Howard Schultz, owner of the ironically named production company "Lighthearted Entertainment." As of 2009, versions of this show have been produced in at least 46 countries. Currently, it is the most notorious of all "entertainments" that use polygraphs.

The game consists of a contestant who is connected to a polygraph and asked a minimum of fifty yes-or-no questions. The contestant is then brought onstage. Nearby are three or four of the contestant's friends and/or family members. Twenty-one of the questions from backstage are again asked of the contestant. If any of the questions are deemed to be too sensitive by one of the contestant's friends or family, they can hit a button that prevents the contestant from answering. This option can only be used once for each contestant. A replacement question, which may be even more sensitive, is then asked in its place. If the onstage answer matches the "true" answer from the backstage polygraph, the contestant is allowed to go on or quit. If the onstage answer is considered "false" when compared to the backstage polygraph, the contestant loses the game and loses any money "earned" up to that point.

It should be pointed out that putting someone into a high stakes situation with family and friends watching as you're asked offensive questions that likely concern them is a recipe for a contestant to feel fear, apprehension, anger, or uncertainty whether or not you are lying, all these emotions result in the physiological symptoms the polygraph is testing for. In other words, the contestants are already primed in such a way that they are likely to give responses that look like a lie on a polygraph whether or not they are actually lying. No doubt those running the show know this and consider it a feature, not a bug; after all, a show is far more interesting when a contestant is called out for an embarrassing 'lie'; who cares if it's really a lie or not if it makes for entertaining television? Any resulting trouble with family and friends who believe the polygraph's accuracy and are angered by the supposed lie don't really matter as long as you get ratings.

There have been many controversies connected to this show. The original Colombian version was cancelled when a woman was asked if she had hired a hit man to kill her husband. When she answered "yes," her husband fled.

The American version, titled The Moment of Truth, ran on Fox during 2008 and 2009. While nobody admitted to anything as spectacular as a murder-for-hire plot, there were other questionable instances.
 * One contestant lost when his "no" answer to the question "When you were a male model, did you stuff your underwear?" was deemed false. His look of utter shock may have been the most honest moment of the series.
 * Another contestant had been accused by his ex-wife of gambling away his son's college fund. He "truthfully" denied stealing his son's college fund. When he and his son embraced, his son said something (barely audible) to the effect of how he knew he shouldn't have believed his mother.
 * Another contestant admitted to having affairs in front of her husband, who was present onstage. While many pundits and social critics focused on the effect this had on her husband, they seemed to ignore what was happening to her father, who was also present onstage. Some of the questions she answered seemed designed to exact revenge on her father, not her husband. She was eventually tripped up when her "yes" answer to the question "Do you think you're a good person?" was deemed "untruthful." According to host Mark L. Wahlberg, the episode barely got the OK to air. This was the most-discussed episode of the U.S. series.
 * The only person ever to win the top prize was a woman raised in a polygamist religious community whose $500,000 question was asking if her father had ever committed statutory rape, which she replied in the affirmative, resulting in the first grand prize win in the history of game shows where absolutely no one seemed happy. Unlike the above examples, this episode was never aired by Fox.
 * Travis Walton appeared on an episode late in the series' run, where he was eliminated on a question asking him if he really was abducted by a UFO, where his answer of "yes" was deemed "untruthful". His episode was also never aired by Fox.
 * Only a few of the contestants successfully completed the third tier ($100,000 level) of the U.S. show. Only two contestants completed the fourth tier ($200,000). Only one made it to the fifth tier ($350,000) and sixth and final tier ($500,000). Jeez, what gives?! Even Who Wants to be a Millionaire? has given away a million now and then!