Good news – Marvel's
Agents of SHIELD has been renewed for a second season. In a later
episode (no spoilers) the programme includes 'the most advanced
polygraph in the world'.
Polygraphs are used in
real life, and labelled (incorrectly) as 'lie-detectors'. It's easy
to see why they're so popular in fiction (in Homeland, it's been used
a few times), but a magic box that tells truth from deceit is just
that: magic. It doesn't have a basis in science.
So, how is it meant to
work, and why doesn't it?
The polygraph measure
autonomic physiological responses. They actually vary quite a bit
with some models being more advanced than others (if you're doing
one, for fun, which has a belt around the chest try leaning back in
your chair. It may alter the signals and make the tester think you're
a chronic drug user). The basic operation, however, is identical.
Aspects measured
include things such as how much you sweat, heart rate, and that sort
of thing.
Initially, you'll be
asked a couple of Yes/No questions. I believe (I did my research on
this about a decade ago, so small errors are possible) that they'll
be mostly truthful for the set-up phase, to establish a baseline of
what your readings are when you're honest.
After this, they'll ask
you a series of Yes/No questions about the matter at hand (have you
been having an affair, do you know who stole the nukes, why did you
watch Eurovision last night, and so on).
There's just one small
flaw in an otherwise ingenious device: it doesn't work.
A report by an American
intelligence agency (which, I hasten to add, was freely available
when I was at university) found that the polygraph was barely better
than tossing a coin, and that its only real value was to frighten
idiot criminals who believe in magic into confessing.
We all know some people
are better liars than others. Some people sweat more. Some are very
calm. The polygraph can't tell between sweating due to nervousness
because you're a serial killer and sweating due to nervousness
because you've just had a shitload of wires attached to you and have
been asked by a stern man in a suit whether you've killed several
people.
There are also various
ways to deliberately fool it. For example, entering a Zen Buddhist
trance. That's quite tricky, but easier methods include a copper coin
under the tongue, or a drawing pin in your shoe (just prick your toe
when giving an honest answer. It'll cause your readings to spike, and
then, if they do when you're lying, they won't look beyond normal).
This is actually a
serious issue. Leaving aside the artistic licence of fiction writers
to exaggerate the polygraph to make it something that actually works,
it's used in the US and, sadly, has started to be used in the UK.
Paedophiles let out of
prison undergo polygraph tests to 'prove' they have not reoffended.
Brilliantly, paedophiles are up there with psychopaths as the best
liars in the world. Terrifyingly, this gives a stamp of 'scientific'
approval that they've not abused any children lately, even though the
polygraph is worthless as a lie-detector.
The polygraph is a
triumph of marketing over science. If policymakers paid more
attention to science and a little less to fiction we wouldn't use the
damned things at all.
Thaddeus
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