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Law and Psychology

University of Georgia School of Law

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P300

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Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Countermeasure Mechanisms In A P300-Based Concealed Information Test, John B. Meixner Jr., J. Peter Rosenfeld Jan 2010

Countermeasure Mechanisms In A P300-Based Concealed Information Test, John B. Meixner Jr., J. Peter Rosenfeld

Scholarly Works

The detection of deception has been the focus of much research in the past 20 years. Though much controversy has surrounded one deception detection protocol, the “Control Question Test” (NRC 2003, Ben-Shakhar 2002), an alternative test, the Guilty Knowledge Test (GKT), developed by Lykken (1959, 1960), is based on scientific principles and has been well-received in the scientific community. The GKT presents subjects with various stimuli, one of which is a guilty knowledge item (termed the probe, such as the gun used to commit a crime). The other stimuli in the test consist of control items that are of the …


The Effects Of Asymmetric Vs. Symmetric Probability Of Targets Following Probe And Irrelevant Stimuli In The Complex Trial Protocol For Detection Of Concealed Information With P300, J. Peter Rosenfeld, Monica Tang, John B. Meixner Jr., Michael Winograd, Elena Labkovsky Jan 2009

The Effects Of Asymmetric Vs. Symmetric Probability Of Targets Following Probe And Irrelevant Stimuli In The Complex Trial Protocol For Detection Of Concealed Information With P300, J. Peter Rosenfeld, Monica Tang, John B. Meixner Jr., Michael Winograd, Elena Labkovsky

Scholarly Works

The complex trial protocol (CTP, [J.P. Rosenfeld, E. Labkovsky, M. Winograd, M.A. Lui, C. Vandenboom & E. Chedid (2008), The complex trial protocol (CTP): a new, countermeasure-resistant, accurate P300-based method for detection of concealed information. Psychophysiology, 45, 906–919.]) is a sensitive, new, countermeasure-resistant, P300-based concealed information protocol in which a first stimulus (Probe or Irrelevant) is followed after about 1.4–1.8 s by a Target or Non-Target second stimulus within one trial. It has been previously run with a potentially confounding asymmetric conditional probability of Targets following Probes vs. Irrelevants. This present study compared asymmetric vs. symmetric conditional probability groups and …


Assigned Versus Random Countermeasure-Like Responses In The P300-Based Complex Trial Protocol For Detection Of Deception: Task Demand Effects, John B. Meixner Jr., Alexander Haynes, Michael Winograd, Jordan Brown, J. Peter Rosenfeld Jan 2009

Assigned Versus Random Countermeasure-Like Responses In The P300-Based Complex Trial Protocol For Detection Of Deception: Task Demand Effects, John B. Meixner Jr., Alexander Haynes, Michael Winograd, Jordan Brown, J. Peter Rosenfeld

Scholarly Works

The Concealed Information Test (CIT) is a credibility assessment protocol of an entirely different nature than the traditional lie detector test. Instead of attempting to detect actual lying (the goal of the commonly used Control Question Test), the goal of the CIT is to determine whether an individual possesses knowledge of specific details of a crime or event. For example, if a murder was committed at 800 Church Avenue using a .38 caliber revolver, the CIT seeks to determine whether a suspect recognizes the address and type of weapon.

The CIT presents subjects with various stimuli, one of which is …