Film, Media & TV12 mins ago
Lie detector
3 Answers
Not that any of the following applies to me, but I was just wondering.......................
Imagine someone went out and got roaring drunk and committed a crime, but due to be so "out of it" couldn't remember what they did.
If they then took a lie detector and (due to my memory loss) answered "no" to the question "did you commit a crime when you were drunk?", would the lie detector know they was lying? I say "lying", but in essence, they would be amnswering "no" coz they genuinely believed that they had not committed a crime.
If the lie detector WOULD "know", how does it do that?
T.I.A.
Imagine someone went out and got roaring drunk and committed a crime, but due to be so "out of it" couldn't remember what they did.
If they then took a lie detector and (due to my memory loss) answered "no" to the question "did you commit a crime when you were drunk?", would the lie detector know they was lying? I say "lying", but in essence, they would be amnswering "no" coz they genuinely believed that they had not committed a crime.
If the lie detector WOULD "know", how does it do that?
T.I.A.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Polygraphs don't detect lies, merely the slight changes in a person's pulse etc when anserwing certain questions. The detection of 'lies' is down to the operator who must be skilled in using the machine and also setting up the equipment and the subject with a whole battery of tuning questions to gauge the subject's responses to known answers.
If the subject could not remember the incident, then their answer of 'no' would be genuine as far as they were concerned and the polygraph operator would mark their response as an accurate one.
Further to the last answer, no, they are not accurate and are not permissable as evidence in UK courts because of this.
If the subject could not remember the incident, then their answer of 'no' would be genuine as far as they were concerned and the polygraph operator would mark their response as an accurate one.
Further to the last answer, no, they are not accurate and are not permissable as evidence in UK courts because of this.