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Did you know that the report also:
concluded that this level of accuracy was probably overstated
?
?
And this is why I won't write for SkepticReport. The editors cherry-pick and misquote, out of context, nearly as badly as creationists do.
What, in context, is 'this level of accuracy"?
Your prior quotation, from Wikipedia, suggests that:
After culling through the numerous studies of the accuracy of polygraph detection the NAS identified 57 that had “sufficient scientific rigor”. These studies concluded that a polygraph test regarding a specific incident can discern the truth at “a level greater than chance, yet short of perfection”. The report also concluded that this level of accuracy was probably overstated and the levels of accuracy shown in these studies "are almost certainly higher than actual polygraph accuracy of specific-incident testing in the field.”
This misrepresents the NAS report at several levels.
First, "the studies" did not conclude that polygraphs could discern the truth at "a level greater than chance, yet short of perfection." That conclusion, as well as the quotation, is NAS's. (Report, p.4) Individual studies, of course, have their own individual estimates which vary widely as are reported in the appendix.
In that same paragraph, they compare the use of polygraph for two completely different purposes --- the use as a specific-incident investigation tool and the use as a screening tool. The report stated (p. 4) that "because actual screening applications involve considerably more ambiguity for the examinee and in determining truth than arises in specific-incident studies, polygraph accuracy for screening purposes is almost certainly lower than can be achieved by specific-incident polygraph tests in the field."
That says nothing about the accuracy of the polygraph per se, merely that the accuracy to be expected in screening situations is lower than that in specific-incident situations. It's an apples to oranges comparison, with us having
a priori reason to believe that oranges are harder. To make the fact that oranges are believed to be harder into an indictment of apples is misrepresentation.
So, in direct answer to your question, I did not know that the report claimed that better-than-chance accuracy for polygraph testing is probably overstated, because it simply did not make that claim.
The closest to this is probably the section on p. 128 :
Theory and basic research give no clear guidance about whether laboratory conditions underestimate or overestimate the accuracy that can be expected in realistic settings.
Available data are inadequate to test these hypotheses. [...]
Evidence from Medical Diagnostic Testing. Substantial experience with clinical diagnostic and screening tests suggests that laboratory models, as well as observational field studies of the type found in the polygraph literature, are likely to overstate true polygraph accuracy.Much information has been obtained by comparing observed accuracy when clinical medical tests are evaluated during development with subsequent accuracy when they become accepted and are widely applied in the field. An important lesson is that medical tests seldom perform as well in general field use as their performance in initial evaluations seems to promise (Ransohoff and Feinstein, 1978; Nierenberg and Feinstein, 1988; Reid, Lachs, and Feinstein, 1995; Fletcher, Fletcher, and Wagner, 1996; Lijmer et al., 1999).
The reasons for the falloff from laboratory and field research settings to performance in general field use are fairly well understood.
In other words, the problem is with the specific numeric claims of accuracy, not with the "better than chance" and is to be expected in any transition from laboratory to field.
This is followed up (p. 129) by
In view of the above issues, we believe that the range of accuracy indexes (A) estimated from the scientifically acceptable laboratory and field studies, with a midrange between 0.81 and 0.91, most likely over-states true polygraph accuracy in field settings involving specific-incident investigations.
Thus, what is specifically overstated are the estimates (from 0.81 to 0.91), not the simple better-than-chance accuracy.
They specifically reiterate this point in their conclusion. After discussing (p148) a number of problems with measuring accuracy, including the overestimation problem to which they specifically mention (p. 149: "the accuracy index most likely overestimates performance in realistic field situations due to technical biases in field research designs, the increased variability created by the lack of control of test administration and interpretation in the field, the artificiality of laboratory settings, and possible publication bias.") they nevertheless continue (p. 149) with
Despite these caveats, the empirical data clearly indicate that for several populations of naïve examinees not trained in countermeasures, polygraph tests for event-specific investigation detect deception at rates well above those expected from random guessing. Test performance is far below perfection and highly variable across situations. The studies report accuracy levels comparable to various diagnostic tests used in medicine.
The study goes on to warn
We note, however, that the performance of medical diagnostic tests in widespread field applications generally degrades relative to their performance in validation studies, and this result can also be expected for polygraph testing
but this fact obviously has not reduced the usefulness of medical diagnostic tests "in widespread field applications" despite the marginally degraded performance accuracy.
It is therefore fair to say that the NAS is largely positive about the ability of polygraphs to distinguish lying from truth-telling under laboratory conditions, with naive subjects, in specific-incident investigations. Indeed, the NAS explicitly makes such a statement at least twice, on page 4 and page 149.
There is no statement in the entire body of the NAS report that suggest that, under such conditions, polygraph testing is no more accurate than chance, or even that polygraph testing is not significantly more accurate than chance. They do suggest that some of the specific claims of laboratory accuracy may not be reproducible under field conditions, but this is neither surprising nor does it make the technology invalid.
I stand by my writing. You, and Wikipedia, have misrepresented the content of the NAS report in a way to make it much less positive about the actual obtainable accuracy of polygraph testing. Given this history of editorial misrepresentation, there is no
possible way that I would write for your journal.