Can you please link to the post where you answered this question unambiguously?
You mean to say you jump in on this part of the discussion without bothering to find out where it started?
Don't waste my time, OK?
OK then assume that everything I think about how a test is handled it wrong. I know very little about how a test is handled and am therefore not basing my questions on anything about that. I am merely trying to obtain information from you.
If you know very little about how a test is handled, you shouldn't criticize those who do.
Then you shouldn't be arguing from the perspective of the underlying mechanism being wrong - as that has no bearing on whether the lie detection results are true. You first need to show us the flaws in the experiments that lead to a woo, no better than chance technique getting better than chance results. How about you dissect some of these experiments for us? If you can show why all the experiments were not fair tests, then people might actually see what you are getting at.
It isn't the experiments that lead to woo, it's the premise that is woo.
Yes, because changes from the baseline in the old "sweat, breath'n'blood pressure" are indicators that seem to be correlated with lying. Whether because of anxiety, excitement, orienting response or something else is very interesting and helpful for making the test more accurate, but excluding one (which I don't think you have by the way) doesn't make the resulting correlations disappear ito thin air.
That's what was once thought, yes. We know today that those can also be indicators of a lot of other things.
What is a hallmark of pseudoscience? Using physiological measures to indicate psychological processes?
No, continuing to base the claim that those can reveal if people lie or not.
Nobody is denying that there are significant error rates. Otherwise it would have a heckofalot better description than "better than chance". And that's why pretty much everyone here argues that although it is not pseudoscience, it should never be used in a real life situation where it would be regarded as "diagnostic" - ie admissable in court, sacking someone based only on the results etc. But that doesn't mean that it can't have any applications.
What are those?
There was no lie. You must be seriously humour impaired.
A liar, when found out, claims it was a joke....
Why is it so hard for you to point out my errors in describing how the challenge works? It is very simple: whether or not you can do preliminary tests, the only group that can actually accept a challenge is the JREF. Their opinion (and specifically Randi's) is the only one that counts. As you said in post #247 - "I can't say whether it would qualify or not. That is entirely up to Randi."
Why can't you accept that Skeptica can do preliminary tests?
First, you realize that you are insisting that I am arguing two different things in the bolded paragraphs, correct?
Second, my question does not rely on how polygraphs work. For the purpose of the challenge, all they have to do is work. And all I am asking you is if in your opinion (considering your stated stance that they are "pseudoscience") a successful test of the polygraph should qualify.
No, no, no. You were talking about how polygraphs work, e.g., when you argued that people don't get excited when they lie. Therefore, answer the question:
You argue that people don't get excited when they lie.
You argue that polygraphs detect changes in people when they lie.
Therefore, you must argue that people get more excited when they lie.
Therefore, you must argue that polygraphs work by detecting these excitements.
Is this correct, yes or no?