American Polygraph Association
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The American Polygraph Association (or APA) was established in 1966 and includes 2,500 members in the polygraph field.
The stated goals of the APA are:
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- Serving the cause of truth with integrity, objectivity and fairness to all persons
- Encouraging and supporting research, training and education to benefit members of the Association as well as those who support its purpose and by providing a forum for the presentation and exchange of information derived from such research, training and education
- Establishing and enforcing standards for admission to membership and continued membership in the Association
- Governing the conduct of members of the Association by requiring adherence to a Code of Ethics and a set of Standards and Principles of Practice [1]
APA members are proponents of the control question technique of polygraph admission,[2] which includes asking questions designed to gain a greater physiological response from innocent subjects being given a polygraph.[3]
[edit] Notes
- ^ APA Mission Retrieved 10 June 2007
- ^ Furedy, JJ; RJ Heslegrave (1988). "Validity of the Lie Detector". Criminal Justice and Behavior 15 (2): 219–246. American Association for Correctional and Forensic Psychology. doi: .
- ^ Bull, R; H Baron, G Gudjonsson, S Hampson, G Rippon, A Vrij (2004). A review of the current scientific status and fields of application of Polygraphic Deception Detection. Final report (6 October 2004) from the BPS Working Party. British Psychological Society. Retrieved on 2007-06-17.