#polygraph
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2016, 2020, and 2024 refs for mr. Polygraph! ♥ I've had him for so long and it was so exciting to finally get to introduce him in Truth and Phantasm. He's going to continue to have a prominent role in the fifth book of Mandatory, Overcoming Adversity, so I wanted to draw him again! ☆*: .。. o(≧▽≦)o .。.:*☆ I'm really happy with his design now so I didn't change anything, but it was fun to see a bit of improvement!
#strong hearts are mandatory#mandatory#ocs#original characters#cat#my ocs#my characters#Polygraph#Honesty
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yeah, quick question: what the fuck?? give kristi noem a polygraph and ask how much she's being paid by trump and putin for heading the DHS, then ask if she enjoyed killing her own dog...
#whistleblowers#kristi noem#dog killer#department of homeland security#fuck kristi noem#polygraph#dhs#homeland security#us politics#u.s. politics#anti capitalism#anarchblr#anarchism#u.s. news#us news#social justice#advocate#advocacy#activism#leftism#take action#fuck maga#maga#maga morons#maga cult#putin's bitch#putin's hoe#fraud#immigration#ice
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Could it be suggested that Phoenix Wright's use of the Magatama sort of muddies the whole "trust your client" thing
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Behbeh
#keep calm#lie detector#polygraph#fail#the truth#nerves#nervous#spike#chart#polygraph test#heart rate#blood pressure#scared#calm as a cookie#cartoon#teddy bear#illustration#testimony#art#funny#daily#daily bear#behbeh#comedy
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History of Polygraph
The earliest use of this knowledge for detecting deception is credited to Erasistratus, a Greek physician who served as a royal physician under Seleucus I Nicator of Syria. He used the pulse to detect deception. Read more. Authored by: Prashansa Tripathi
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#animation#art#gif#aee#design#2d animation#graphic#abstract#motion design#digital art#wave#waves#lifeline#ryhthm#heart rate#polygraph
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They will hook me up to a polygraph and ask me if I love you, and I will say no, but the needle will jump and sputter exactly how you laugh
Unknown
#dark academia#quotes#academia#academia aesthetic#dark academic aesthetic#poetry#love#literature#dark academia aesthetic#tiktok#tiktok quotes#love quotes#romanticism#romantic academia#romantic#breakup#breakup quotes#polygraph#poems and quotes#poem quotes#sad poem#poems and poetry
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can some autistic person tell me what the fuck a polygraph test is. dont really trust allistic people w this one
#only an autistic person could explain this one to me#my autistic ass once spent like an hour researching earwax#:3#autism#polygraph#polygraph test
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US federal shenanigans, Quoted from another blog: " The Department of Homeland Security is performing polygraph tests on employees [x]"
This is totally out of the fed playbook in Snow Crash.
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#1155 How does a lie detector work?


How does a lie detector work? Lie detectors work by recording breathing rate, pulse, blood pressure, muscular activity, and perspiration to look for any changes. They are not admissible in court because they don’t always work. The modern lie detector (polygraph) was created in 1945, but there were many steps along the way. The first polygraph was invented in 1895 by Cesare Lombroso, which measured changes in blood pressure. In 1904, Vittorio Benussi added a way to test breathing speed as well. An American called William Moulton Marston took up the idea of the lie detector and he worked hard to get it used in American courts. He also invented the Wonder Woman cartoon character as well, with her lasso of truth. A device that could measure skin response as well was first used in 1939 by the FBI. Further changes were added until there was a device in 1945 that could do most of what modern devices could do. Today, the recording is digital and all of the sensors are far more delicate, but the idea remains the same. The name polygraph was given to the machine in 1921. “Poly” is Greek for many and “graph” is Greek for writing. It was created in 1871 to apply to a machine that could read different bodily signals, not for the purpose of detecting lies. The basic idea behind a lie detector is that telling a lie and trying not to be caught is a stressful experience. People who read body language say that they can tell when someone is lying because of where they look, their body language, the words and grammatical structures they use, and a host of other things. They probably can, but someone who is adept at lying could work to cover these things. The theory behind a polygraph is that you can learn to mask your gestures, but you cannot mask your body’s natural functions. When you tell a lie you will get stressed and your body will have a stress response. Your heart rate will go up, your breathing will speed up, your blood pressure will rise, your muscles will tense slightly, and you will sweat more. That is what a polygraph is measuring and they are so delicate that they can measure even very slight changes. The heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing rates are fairly simple to measure, which is why the earliest polygraphs focused on those. Muscles tensing requires devices that can measure the electrical signals across muscles and sweating is measure in the same way. Sweat is measured with a galvanic skin response detector. When you sweat, your body releases water mixed with salt because it wants to make sure the salt levels in your body stay the same as you lose water. Salt conducts electricity more readily than just water or just skin and the detector can measure this electrical difference. When you go in for a lie detector test, the technician will wire all of the sensors to you. Before the test starts, the technician will stress how effective these tests are because that will increase the likelihood of a reaction when someone lies. The technician will ask a few questions to start with to gain a baseline and they will ask the person to lie once. The technician will announce that they detected the lie, whether they did or not, to emphasize the effectiveness of the test and to increase the stress a guilty person will feel. Then the technician will ask questions, mixing in questions that are not connected or questions they know to be true to make sure that their baseline is accurate. Afterwards, the technician will go over the data and look at the responses. In theory, tying these physical responses to the question will show when someone was lying. Polygraph technicians claim to be able to spot lies over 80% of the time. This is why polygraphs used to be admissible in court to help prove whether someone was guilty or innocent. They were disallowed when research revealed that they were actually far less effective than the technicians claimed. The problems are that innocent people can become extremely nervous when questioned in such a situation and produce a false positive. Another problem is that there are tactics to avoid a physical response on difficult questions. One is to pinch yourself really hard on all of the diagnostic questions. This will produce a pain response, which is identical to a stress response, making it impossible to tell lies from the truth. Another method is to just be calm. A third problem is that some people who have committed crimes don’t feel emotions in a normal way and would probably pass a lie detector. It is likely that innocent people have been found guilty and guilty people have been found innocent on the strength of polygraph results. And this is what I learned today. Liked this? Try these: - #388 How do metal detectors work? - #928 How does a motion detector work? - #100 Who came up with the phrase "flight or fight"? - #372 How does a smoke detector work? - #126 Is a space elevator possible? Sources https://www.researchgate.net/publication/232572993_Admissibility_of_Polygraph_Tests_The_Application_of_Scientific_Standards_Post-Daubert https://www.reddit.com/r/askscience/comments/l8me4e/how_do_lie_detectors_work_how_accurate_are_they/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygraph https://science.howstuffworks.com/question123.htm https://www.etymonline.com/word/polygraph https://www.healthline.com/health/why-is-sweat-salty#downsides Image By Federal Bureau of Investigation - https://multimedia.fbi.gov/large/3341, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=63821903 Read the full article
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wtf is with all these youtubers getting "professional polygraph technitions" to come on and tell if their lying or not. its first, just boring bad content cause its just the youtuber being asked yes or no questions and then reacting to the polygraph guy, but also like. polygraphs aren't real! it doesn;t fucking matter what the polygraph guy says, this shit is fake as fuck! bad content
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