Your own citations disprove you.
No, they don't...
You originally claimed that "The NAS concluded that lie detector tests based on emotional response of a subject have no scientific basis."
The actual words of the NAS report directly contradict this. They're not wildly enthusiastic about the technology, but they specifically acknowledge that it has a valid scientific basis (as well as their specific statements that it performs well).
Pg. 81
To the extent that these principles do not hold universally, an examiner’s rapport with the examinee, the desired understanding of the polygraph examination and questions, and the clinical skill in determining the person’s veracity (i.e., detection of deception from demeanor) are all important in distinguishing among individuals who have physiological responses not indicative of deception (e.g., anxiety or anger regarding relevant questions, insufficient emotionality about the comparison questions), those who have physiological responses indicative of relatively innocuous transgressions, and those who have physiological responses indicative of significant transgressions.
These distinctions are made on the basis of clinical judgment, which, though sometimes accurate, does not stand on a good foundation of theory or empirical evidence. There is little basis for relying on the accuracy of clinical judgments, especially in individual cases, without such a foundation.
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=10420&page=81
Empasis is mine. No, they don't acknowledge that it has a scientific basis. In fact, they say that it does not have any foundation in which to believe CQT polygraph could have any accuracy.
Given how you've misrepresented the very quotation you offer in support, I see no reason to treat your representation of the "large bulk of research" with any confidence.
I've misrepresented nothing...
Especially since the "evidence" that you cite against the CQT polygraph was, by and large, also available to the NAS and was not sufficient to shift their opinion. The Lykken book that you recommend was, in fact, specifically cited by the NAS but they evidently found it entirely unpersuasive.
No, they found Lykken's book to be very persuasive.
Additionally, Stephen E. Feinberg, one of the main authors of the NAS polygraph study in his testimony to Congress stated:
"Let me just conclude by reminding you that polygraph testing rests on weak scientic underpinnings despite nearly a century of study. Much of the available evidence for judging its validity lacks scientic rigor, and our committee sifted that evidence and the report makes clear the limitations of the polygraph for the present context."
From Fienberg, S.E. and P.C. Stern. 2005. In Search of the Magic Lasso: The Truth About the Polygraph.
Statistical Science 20(3):249–60.
Yeah. That is to say, it works, and you have a theory of why.
As I stated, when you have a specific incident, cognition comes into play regardless of the emotional basis of the comparison question. It is in this situation that the CQT becomes more like its relative the GKT...
And then you turn around and tell me that it doesn't work. Mere sarcasm cannot convey my contempt for this particular rhetorical flourish.
When I say it doesn't work, I mean that it doesn't work consistently. You have to separate out utility of the polygraph from its validity and accuracy. The NAS said that the CQT polygraph has utility in that it might deter spies and possibly catch a few but it has little validity and its accuracy cannot be reliably estimated. They actually refused to state an accuracy number. The one they use in their calculations (80%) is a hypothetical and they do not believe that CQT polygraph has very high accuracy.
Which does not make polygraphy unreliable or pseudoscience. You're making the merely "good" the enemy of the "best" here (a common failing among academics) -- just because we have the potential for technology that works better does not mean that the old technology should be abandoned; if that were the case, we would have had electric cars fifty years ago -- and we'd probably still rely on the railroads for most of our transportation, because the cars would neither have the range nor the cargo capacity to be useful. We still don't know how to calibrate antipsychotic medicines beyond rudimentary guesses, so I suppose we should stop using them. Heck, we can't even perform spam filtering successfully.
Except that we do have a better type of test, GKT, that does not have the same pitfalls as CQT. GKT also has been shown to have a sound theoretical basis (orienting response) that the NAS rejected as plausible for CQT.
It is neither unscientific nor nonstandardizable; the science is well documented, and there are arguably too many standards and protocols. There are certainly abuses possible, when (ill-informed) people expect more of a tool than the tool is capable of delivering. But that's not the tool's fault.
Uniformity of process is not the same as validation nor is it standardizable in a psychological sense. Every person in a CQT polygraph serves as their own baseline, hence it is an unstandardizable test. Again to quote the NAS, pg. 213:
Despite efforts to create standardized polygraph testing procedures, each test with each individual has significant unique features.
http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=10420&page=213
That sounds like unstandardizable to me.
Well, let me know when you get "perfection" out of your technology, then. You'll be the first, you know. I don't think we've got any other test -- forensic, criminological, or diagnostic -- that can achieve "perfection." But I'll be sure to point out that any level of success of your own technology renders it -- by your own admission -- "unscientific and nonstandardizable."
I don't expect perfection but I expect it to have validity, reliablity, and accuracy, all of which the CQT polygraph does not have.
I'm sorry to be so harsh. But I certainly hope that your standards for treatment of previous research is more even-handed in your journal article, or alternatively, that I don't end up reviewing it. If I caught the statement "the NAS concluded that lie detector tests based on emotional response of a subject have no scientific basis" in your article, I would read no further.
That's your perogative. I'm submitting it to an offender treatment journal though, are you a reviewer for any of those?
You and I have read the same NAS report and have come to differing conclusions about its accuracy, validity, and utility. That's fine. I really don't understand how anyone can read the NAS report and come away thinking that CQT polygraph was useful, accurate or grounded in science but then nothing much surprises me anymore when it comes to human behavior.
However, you can't argue that the NAS concluded that reliance on CQT polygraph in screening applications is unwise and poses a threat to national security. If the CQT polygraph was so useful, why do you think they draw such a conclusion?
I'm all for future research and efforts to further ground polygraphy in science. But CQT polygraph to me is a dead end. Efforts should be made towards GKT polygraph.
Finally, given what you've read so far, which do you think is better, GKT or CQT?
DrKitten, regards...