The polygraph instrument has
undergone a dramatic change in the last decade. For many years, polygraphs were
those instruments that you see in the movies with little needles scribbling
lines on a single strip of scrolling paper. These are called analog
polygraphs. Today, most polygraph tests are administered with digital
equipment. The scrolling paper has been replaced with sophisticated algorithms
and computer monitors.
When you sit down in the chair for
a polygraph exam, several tubes and wires are connected to your body in
specific locations to monitor your physiological activities. Deceptive behavior
is supposed to trigger certain physiological changes that can be detected by a
polygraph and a trained examiner, who is sometimes called a forensic
psychophysiologist (FP). This examiner is looking for the amount of
fluctuation in certain physiological activities. Here's a list of physiological
activities that are monitored by the polygraph and how they are monitored:
The basic components of a lie detector system
- Respiratory rate - Two pneumographs, rubber tubes filled with air, are placed around the test subject's chest and abdomen. When the chest or abdominal muscles expand, the air inside the tubes is displaced. In an analog polygraph, the displaced air acts on a bellows, an accordion-like device that contracts when the tubes expand. This bellows is attached to a mechanical arm, which is connected to an ink-filled pen that makes marks on the scrolling paper when the subject takes a breath. A digital polygraph also uses the pneumographs, but employs transducers to convert the energy of the displaced air into electronic signals.
- Blood pressure/heart rate - A blood-pressure cuff is placed around the subject's upper arm. Tubing runs from the cuff to the polygraph. As blood pumps through the arm it makes sound; the changes in pressure caused by the sound displace the air in the tubes, which are connected to a bellows, which moves the pen. Again, in digital polygraphs, these signals are converted into electrical signals by transducers.
- Galvanic skin resistance (GSR) - This is also called electro-dermal activity, and is basically a measure of the sweat on your fingertips. The finger tips are one of the most porous areas on the body and so are a good place to look for sweat. The idea is that we sweat more when we are placed under stress. Fingerplates, called galvanometers, are attached to two of the subject's fingers. These plates measure the skin's ability to conduct electricity. When the skin is hydrated (as with sweat), it conducts electricity much more easily than when it is dry.
Some polygraphs also record arm and
leg movements. As the examiner asks questions, signals from the sensors connected
to your body are recorded on a single strip of moving paper. You will learn
more about the examiner and the test itself later.
Detractors of the polygraph call lie
detection a voodoo science, saying that polygraphs are no more accurate at
detecting lies than the flip of a coin. "Despite claims of 'lie detector'
examiners, there is no machine that can detect lies," reads a statement
from the American Civil
Libertiaes Union (ACLU). "The 'lie detector' does not measure
truth-telling; it measures changes in blood pressure, breath rate and
perspiration rate, but those physiological changes can be triggered by a wide
range of emotions."
Nice pictures.Thanks for this useful post.online book Ticket through Redbus
ReplyDelete