They dont work, because not lie detectors at all. To my understanding they’re basically just a tech-assisted version of trying to tell if someone is lying by trying to watch their emotional reaction. They might be able to tell you if someone is stressed, under the notion that someone lying will be more stressed than when telling the truth from the effort and worry of being caught, but that isn’t really true necessarily.
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Submitted 3 weeks ago by throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works to [deleted]
Comments
CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social 3 weeks ago
throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 3 weeks ago
I wonder why the intelligence agencies (FBI, CIA) still use these to access new recruits 🤔
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
Because it lets them see how people react under pressure. If people think the stress detector works, they are more likely to be honest because they are worried the people using it will think they are hiding something.it is a mechinal version of “we already know the truth, we are just asking to see if you lie to us”.
The implication of the machine often gets results even though it isn’t reliable in any way since stress is not an indication of anything specific.
GoodLuckToFriends@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
Because they get people to admit to things they wouldn’t otherwise. A polygraph test starts with the interviewer “just talking” (and those are massive, giant quotation marks there) to you for about a half hour. They slip in little statements about other, experienced officers who are currently employed despite past wrongdoings, “because they admitted” to the bad shit. Meanwhile, when you admit to bad shit, guess who’s not getting hired?
The interviewer will give you a giant list to go through, asking if you’ve done any of the hundreds of bad things, and ask you to explain any “yes” answers you give to the question of committing a crime.
So now you’re primed to confess to things, and the interviewer and agency gets to comb through those confessions to see if they don’t want to hire you. They also get to reject you if they don’t like you and blame it on you failing the ‘lie detector’ test, or the interviewer can simply say you’re lying.
Rivalarrival@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
Plausible deniability. The real part of the security clearance is the background check they perform, including the interviews. If they find out from some secret source that you immigrated from North Korea, they won’t tell you they figured that out. They’ll just tell you that you didn’t pass the polygraph and send you home. Your North Korean handler will report back that they need to train future spies how to defeat the polygraph, but fail to close the actual hole in their security.
TheFANUM@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
They don’t. Only shady police that already lie about everything and use it as a tool to lie more effectively
bradorsomething@ttrpg.network 2 weeks ago
The most important part of it is “is there anything you’d like to admit, before we take the test?”
Bwaz@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
They flat out DON’T work at all in detecting lies. Well documented as total fraud. Polygraph just means ‘many graphs’, which is all they produce: many graphs of sensors output not having anything to do with honest or dishonest responses.
agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
many graphs of sensors output not having anything to do with honest or dishonest responses.
Well, they sense physiological changes associated with dishonesty (stress/nervousness). The problem is they can’t pick up false positives (someone being honest despite being nervous under interrogation) or false negatives (someone who can remain totally unfazed while being dishonest).
So while technically they do have something to do with honest/dishonest responses, it’s nowhere near a direct enough correlation to be useful for the purpose.
Jiggle_Physics@sh.itjust.works 2 weeks ago
The changes they pick up on are responses to a lot of different things, not just lying, so even the premise is fatally flawed.
prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 weeks ago
Yeah, but they circle parts of the graphs with red pen so it must be real!
HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 3 weeks ago
Polygraphs, at best, potentially measure nervousness. The assumption is that lying makes people more nervous than telling the truth.
As others have said, the science behind this is bullshit.
barneypiccolo@lemm.ee 3 weeks ago
I’ve taken 3 polygraphs in my lifetime, and I lied on all three. None of the polygraphers caught the lies, but all three accused me of lying on other questions where I told the truth.
Polygraphs are voodoo. I might take one for a job, if it were required, but I would never agree to one for the police. I would NEVER trust my freedom to one.
Archangel1313@lemm.ee 3 weeks ago
Lie detectors can’t determine the truth. They can only tell if you’re nervous about something. They monitor heart rate, breathing, skin temperature and perspiration levels. They can see when these factors change when asked specific questions, which may indicate that you are lying…but it’s really a matter of the kinds of questions they ask, and how your reactions are interpreted. They are not considered reliable.
MTK@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
This. They measure these body changes and some idiots decided that these correlate perfectly with lies, but really they can correlate with plenty of things. They start with a base measurement where they ask you simple and verifiable questions such as your name, address, etc.
Here are some legitimate reasons that can get you marked as a liar:
- Getting nervous because you are being investigated.
- An accusatory question gets you nervous
- Panic attack
- Physical discomfort, can be because of a long investigation.
- A question agitates you
- And more
A polygraph can be useful to help uncover the truth as it can help investigators possibly find subjects that disturb you and could relate to lies.
Calling a polygraph a lie detector is ignorant, malicious, stupid, or some combination of the above.
lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com 3 weeks ago
They’re junk pseudoscience as stated in introductory textbooks on psychology & by the National Academy of Sciences & American Psychological Association. Law enforcement keeps them not for their scientific validity, but as an interrogation tactic for people who don’t know better.
al_Kaholic@lemmynsfw.com 3 weeks ago
Huh another reason police suck throw it onto the pile.
lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com 3 weeks ago
Police ethical standards are practically nonexistent in the US. Deception of juveniles & the intellectually disabled is permitted in most states to obtain court-admissible confessions, and police are trained to obtain confessions that way.
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
It can go in with K-9 units ‘smelling something’ and all the other made up bullshit that they use to violate people’s rights.
Feyd@programming.dev 3 weeks ago
Polygraph is basically just there so there interviewer can say the polygraph says you’re lying and try to get you to say what that want to.
throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 3 weeks ago
Me: Tells the Truth
Interviewer: “You’re lying”
Me: “Oh, I’m actually Special Agent [Name Here] on an undercover mission to expose fraudsters pretending to be ‘Lie Detector’ experts. You’re under arrest”
(Actually that’s a lie, I’m a sovereign citizen, and I’m performing a citizen’s arrest)
Etterra@discuss.online 3 weeks ago
Okay you got me. I’m Neptunian.
Kolanaki@pawb.social 3 weeks ago
That’s the neat part: they don’t!
Boddhisatva@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
“There’s no unique physiological sign of deception. And there’s no evidence whatsoever that the things the polygraph measures — heart rate, blood pressure, sweating, and breathing — are linked to whether you’re telling the truth or not,” says Leonard Saxe, a psychologist at Brandeis University who’s conducted research into polygraphs. In an exhaustive report, the National Research Council concluded, “Almost a century of research in scientific psychology and physiology provides little basis for the expectation that a polygraph test could have extremely high accuracy.”
The real question is, why do people think that they work? Why do government agencies use them to grant clearances when there is no evidence that they can reliably detect falsehoods and ample evidence that they are known to give false positives when people are actually telling the truth?
Go take some classes on stress management and biofeedback and learn to control all those things they are testing for. Then you won’t need to worry about what the questioners mean when they ask you something.
GoodLuckToFriends@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
Go take some classes on stress management and biofeedback and learn to control all those things they are testing for
The only real measure that they can read is your breathing rate. Everything else is so variable naturally that it’s just noise.
Boddhisatva@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
You can learn to consciously control a lot of things that various ‘lie detectors’ monitor. I took a stress management/biofeedback class in college where we learned to raise and lower galvanic skin response, heart rate, and blood pressure. It was a fun class, and in learning to control them, you can also reduce the chance of getting a false positive by keeping any of those variables from drifting to far from the expected range.
wolframhydroxide@sh.itjust.works 3 weeks ago
Okay, literally none of these are the ACTUAL answer to the question, and if you’re in the US in a position to take a polygraph, I want you to succeed. These people saying that it doesn’t work DO NOT MATTER, because you’re going to be taking it either way. So, as someone who has actually TAKEN a polygraph with the CIA for a TS Clearance, allow me to tell you the actual answer:
Before the polygraph is hooked up, you will spend as much time as you need going through every question you will be asked. You have the opportunity to bring up concerns with question ambiguity then. They will work with you to make sure that you feel comfortable answering any question they ask with a straight “yes” or “no”. I don’t remember what the specific wording was when they asked me that question, and it would technically be illegal for me to tell you anyway. I hope that this is more helpful to you than “hurr-durr, it doesn’t work”.
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
You fell for snake oil
wolframhydroxide@sh.itjust.works 3 weeks ago
Did you actually read my comment? Again, I am not saying that it works, but that it doesn’t MATTER whether it works, because they are going to do the polygraph anyway, and this person needs to know the actual procedure, not useless navel-gazing about how, surprising nobody, the US government uses ridiculous tests, spends obscene amounts of time and money, and all of it amounts to a fucking vibe check.
YES, it’s WORTHLESS, but that isn’t going stop the fucking fascist across the table from you from judging you by it, and arguing over it is PRECISELY as worthless as the test itself.
prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 weeks ago
You should work on your reading comprehension.
DirigibleProtein@aussie.zone 3 weeks ago
If they make you take a polygraph test, insist on a tarot reading and a full personal horoscope as well. Between the three of them, there’s no way that they can’t find the truth!
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
Don’t forget to get your Miggs-Bryer personality certificate!
TheKMAP@lemmynsfw.com 3 weeks ago
If in the moment you’re replying to your own interpretation, you’re fine. But the second you overthink about their intentions, you will be freaking out, and that’s what the machine sees. One technique for bypassing lie detectors is to raise the baseline by flexing your butthole but there’s techniques to catch that, too.
SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
How do they catch that? Digital rectal insertion?
GoodLuckToFriends@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
There’s a pad that you sit on that will register the flexing of muscles in the area.
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
If someone is asking you questions with a polygraph they are interrogating you with a predetermined outcome and it does not matter at all how stressed you are or whether you tell the truth. Even if you show no signs of stress, they can subjectively interpret the output to say that you were stressed.
Linktank@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
Just get “nervous” at every question and you’re golden.
throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 3 weeks ago
Lol my anciety is through the roof.
I went to the ER once because I thought I was having a heart attack but they didn’t find anything after blood tests and an x ray.
So its just extreme anxiety and paranoia.
Linktank@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
Sounds like you’re set bro. Just treat every question like you don’t actually know the answer.
“My name? Uh… Uh…”
Start to question if you really do know your own name. Are there actually 5 lights? There MIGHT be!
OldManBOMBIN@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
It depends on how you interpret the question.
Polygraphs “work” by detecting shifts in your breathing, heart rate, perspiration, and sometimes anal sphincter tension.
If you “aren’t lying,” typically these things do not change (much).
If you “are lying,” you’ll begin to sweat, your heart rate will jump, and your breathing will become more rapid.
I keep using quotes because all of this is unreliable and manipulatable.
And the anal sphincter thing? That’s because usually all it takes to “beat” a polygraph is tightening your butthole.
match@pawb.social 3 weeks ago
Oh no, are they going to find my bluetooth communication anal beads?
OldManBOMBIN@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
Nah dude it’s a government loyalty test, not a chess championship, calm down
GoodLuckToFriends@lemmy.today 3 weeks ago
Go read the book called, and I may be remembering this incorrectly, ‘Beat the polygraph.’ It goes into the history, the failures, and the ‘science’ of polygraphs. It’s enough to get you pretty deep in the subject without reading actual research papers.
Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 2 weeks ago
Since the others tackled polygraph’s uselessness, I want to comment on another angle:
I think fundamentally in such a case it will be easy for you to convince yourself that you’re telling the truth in the moment you say it.
After all you are telling the truth to a version of the question, and you only have an assumption that the questioner means a different version of the question. Even if it’s a good assumption, nothing in particular makes your version worse, in fact you could argue it’s better.
That combined should make it easy to mentally gloss over the contradiction. So I think your physiological reaction will be indistinguishable from telling the truth on control questions.
tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip 3 weeks ago
At least one polygraph works, but it’s a sentient machine with an evil plan to destroy the world.
Kvoth@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
They don’t work.
They measure a bunch of vital information, but they are wrong almost as often as they are right. They’re total garbage
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
Not only are they made up indicators, they are operated by someone who does a subjective reading of the output!
Windex007@lemmy.world 3 weeks ago
Fantastic 2 minute video clearly debunking lie detector here