European Researchers Develop More Accurate Full-Body Polygraph 106
jfruh writes: Despite their widespread use in industry and law enforcement, traditional lie-detector polygraphs give accurate results only about 60% of the time, barely better than the 55% accuracy people can get just by following their gut instincts. Now researchers in the UK and the Netherlands are trying to improve that. They claim a full-body polygraph based on motion-capture suits used for movie special effects can detect lies with 75% accuracy.
Accuracy (Score:3)
Re:Accuracy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Accuracy (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly. There's no reliable body response for a lie. All they are measuring is nervousness, which you could have for a variety of reasons. It's the same thing the border agent does.
The purpose of the polygraph is to bully the victim into a confession. The unknowing victim thinks they are undergoing a scientific test, but they are actually being drilled by a skilled interrogator w/ no lawyer present to defuse the loaded questions.
Re:Accuracy (Score:4, Informative)
Yup, the basics of the "classes" people give to beat a polygraph are summarized as relaxation techniques. (Oh noes, will I go to jail for revealing the "secret" that's all over the internet? Oh, I'm okay because I didn't charge for it.. *whew!*). Mask the nervousness and you can spin some wild tales while hooked up and look to be absolutely truthful. Don't get me wrong, it takes a bit of practice but has been proven to work repeatedly. Most often by former "experts" in polygraphs that want to prove what a sham they are.
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The smarter you are the harder it is to pass. The more sociopathic you are, the easier it is to pass. Why do smarter people fail?
Did you eat pig last night? [thoughts] "Um, I ate a beef hotdog. I wonder if that had secret pork in it."[end thought] "no"
The uncertainty in the thought process will trigger a nervous response, even
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Well, that sort of illustrates why the test is wrong so often, but if you TRY to be bored and aggressive, you'll probably think too much ;)
The way they teach you to beat it is pretty simple. Before they ask the hard questions, they need to calibrate. They will ask you something easy to get a base truth response. Likewise, they will get a base lie response. You want your base lie response to go sky high so that nothing can ever match that. Bite your tongue. Tighten you ass. Whatever you like. Once yo
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They can still ask all sorts of loaded questions. For example, have you ever done something personal during work time?
And they give you the questions ahead of time so you won't be confused/blindsided by them. Have you ever done something personal on work time? Yes. Everyone has. I peed today. Oh, and I stood around the water cooler and talked non-work things to my coworkers. I even took off
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As to movie store: They do not want employees that are good at it. If they wanted that, it would not be minimum wage. They want employees that do not cause problems.
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It helps if you're naturally bore...ah fuck this noise, and your little dog too.
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Exactly. There's no reliable body response for a lie. All they are measuring is nervousness, which you could have for a variety of reasons.
A polygraph measures nervousness on one axis and time on the other.
The point is not to measure if the subject is generally nervous, it is to measure a nervous reaction to stimulus, usually a question posed by an interrogator.
Polygraph results are not admissible in court, they do not override a suspect's right to not answer questions and unlike torture there is no real evidence that they lead to false confessions. A stupid but innocent suspect could only believe that the polygraph will exonerate them. It's n
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I found this to be a great read on the subject:
https://antipolygraph.org/lie-... [antipolygraph.org]
They actually talk about specific cases concerning the trouble use of this for defense and intelligence, and why it's such a sham. You also see that they probably keep using it even though it's inaccurate because it beats some confessions out of some people, and I guess they don't mind the innocents that get screwed by it.
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Even 75% means a 1 in 4 failure rate
Ever been to Las Vegas? All those sparkling lights and tall buildings were paid for by winning 52% of the time.
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Sure, but that was winning 52% of the time where each individual loss or win were essentially irrelevant to the casino.
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Protip: this research is being done by some of the best people in inter-disciplinary security, so reading and understanding what they are saying is a good idea before you spout off about how whack polygraph testing is.
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so it can still be trained for (Score:3, Informative)
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That sounds like the kind of thing that happens in militarized dictatorships. Which backwards-ass country was this?
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that guy was arrested for claiming he would help people lie to the FBI. if he had just stuck with claim "I can help you beat a polygraph exam", he would have been fine. Once he said something along the lines of "I can help you beat an FBI polygraph exam", that became illegal.
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75% Accuracy is touted on Slashdot (Score:5, Insightful)
I have a dowsing rod with better accuracy. My coin flip is 50% accurate. But lets convince everyone here that our standards for the truth are low enough to buy a bunch of polygraph apparatus that is 75% accurate, because technology is just not good enough to get to the truth. The truth is, this is totally stupid.
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Employee Polygraph Protection Act (EPPA) (Score:2)
Actually, for most definitions of HR, it doesn't matter what they think about polygraph tests. [dol.gov] In most cases, they aren't allowed to ask you to take one, and you can pretty much always refuse [lawyers.com] if they do.
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HR won't ask you to take one, HR will simply mention them in passing and nudge to the point where an eager applicant will volunteer. Those with negative attitudes towards them simply will be removed from the applicant pool.
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Great news (Score:1)
Now we need to make it compulsory for all politicians to use these when discussing their political manifestos to get in power...
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Now we need to make it compulsory for all politicians to use these when discussing their political manifestos to get in power...
So, let me get this straight... it isn't bad enough most politicians are already sociopaths, you want to actually institute a formal litmus test that is inaccurate, but favors sociopaths?
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Now we need to make it compulsory for all politicians to use these when discussing their political manifestos to get in power...
I figured they used politicians to train the device what a lie looks like.
As if getting a polygraph isn't humiliating.. (Score:4, Insightful)
...and stressful enough already. Now they'll tell you to strip and get into a silly motion capture suit. Next up is sticking a probe up our anus to measure the contraction of the sphincter muscles. After all, it's for our own good. How else will our overlords prevent another Snowden fiasco?
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polygraph exams are designed not so much to stress you but to trip you up with a series of simple yes/no questions then all of a sudden, they hit you with one so loaded you can't answer it without incriminating yourself - but you HAVE to answer it to conform to the test conditions!
When I say "loaded", I mean something like:
"Have you stopped fucking your neighbour's dog?"
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They'll never catch (Score:1)
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You sir made my day :)
For those of you who did not read the original article here is the relevant part:
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surely they can match the tire marks his wheelchair left across my back...
So, still useless... (Score:2)
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No, this one doesn't require tacks in the shoe and such stress inducements to beat it, you only have to practice good posture. So after a few years it might very well drop below 50/50.
MRI (Score:3)
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I wonder why they don't use MRI or some other brain activity visualization technique; Recalling memory and forging a new story must be more distinguishable there than on body movements.
Different than recalling your cover story?
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If you plan the lie in advance it becomes a memory.
What about Brain Fingerprinting? (Score:1)
Brain fingerprinting seems to be quit a bit better at detecting whether a person has knowledge of a crime.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B... [wikipedia.org]
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More accurate than what? (Score:1)
Tea leaves?
Focus on the brain (Score:2)
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I know what would be even better. Let's use mutant precogs to find people guilty of precrime. Apologies to Philip K. Dick.
The Worst Liars Believe it 5 minutes later (Score:2)
Accuracy of traditional lie-detector polygraphs? (Score:2)
There is no verifiable scientific evidence that polygraphs actually work.
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Re:Accuracy of traditional lie-detector polygraphs (Score:4, Informative)
I would also like to know if there is really a "widespread use" of polygraphs. I understood they were almost exclusively used in the US, and that most other countries actually forbade its use as evidence in courts - which would make the use of polygraph a local idiosyncracy rather than a widespread practice.
I think even in the US they are not allowed as evidence. They are used as interogation, but yes, I have never heard of any use outside of the US, at least they fell out of favor around the same time as phrenology.
Pseudoscientific nonsense (Score:3)
They tested this on 75 volunteers. This is an example of the kind of bogus "proof" that is used to justify the utility of polygraphs in the first place.
It's in the same territory as drug companies excluding tests that show problems with their drugs. I'm sure if they ran enough small groups that they could find one with better then 90% and report only that.
Why do polygraph advocates lie so much?
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Why do polygraph advocates lie so much?
Because they use it as a tool to give an air of scientific legitimacy to otherwise shaky accusations. The truth often isn't their first priority, to say the least.
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Why do polygraph advocates lie so much?
Because they know we can't prove they're lying?
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let's see peer-reviewed, double blind studies.
Or I'm calling it.
Voodoo/2.0 (Score:3)
In other news, the same research group has improved the accuracy of entrail reading by including other internal organs, doubled the accuracy of palm reading by using both hands, and are now hard at work devising ever-larger crystal balls in the hopes of refining their accuracy beyond "total bullshit."
polygraph=bullshit (Score:3)
File it with "Scientology bunkum".
Ob (Score:3)
I don't believe them.
Irony (Score:2)
Ironically, the claim that it is possible to detect lies has always been a con. Polygraph detectors are made by con artists.
They can detect nervousness, nothing more. And of course if you lie to people that you can detect lies, that will make it a self fulfilling prophesy to the less intelligent.
Of course a normal level of neurosis and intelligence will make you nervous when they as you an incriminating question. But since when did authorities care what happens to intelligent people rather than to gullib
Still biased in favor of psychopaths (Score:2)
This device is still flawed: it measure nervousness, which means that any psychopath will pass the test without any problem. It also means that people who get emotional easily will fail even if they tell the truth.
IOW: garbage.
Even Toph was fooled. (Score:2)
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Bullshit. (Score:1)
All you really need to know is the claim that it "can detect lies with 75% accuracy."
Nope; sorry, that's just *not* what polygraphs do; conflating "is stressed" or "showing a marked difference in measured body responses" with "is lying" is exactly the problem, no matter how accurate are the sensors.
Everyone should read (it's free!) The Lie Behind the Lie Detector. Subtract agenda as necessary, but don't ignore the meat of it: https://antipolygraph.org/lie-... [antipolygraph.org]