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Countermeasures to P300-based Guilty Knowledge Tests of Deception

Countermeasures to P300-based Guilty Knowledge Tests of Deception. J.Peter Rosenfeld, Matt Soskins,Joanna Blackburn, & Ann Mary Robertson Northwestern University. Supported by DoDPI. Some History (earliest publications). Rosenfeld et al., 1987,1988,1991 Farwell and Donchin, 1991

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Countermeasures to P300-based Guilty Knowledge Tests of Deception

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  1. Countermeasures to P300-based Guilty Knowledge Tests of Deception J.Peter Rosenfeld, Matt Soskins,Joanna Blackburn, & Ann Mary Robertson Northwestern University. Supported by DoDPI

  2. Some History (earliest publications) • Rosenfeld et al., 1987,1988,1991 • Farwell and Donchin, 1991 • Allen, Iacono, & Danielson, 1992 • Johnson and Rosenfeld, 1992 • Since we were there at beginning, why do we challenge now with countermeasures? (1) It’s about time….

  3. 2) Farwell’s web page, claiming 100% accuracy:

  4. Stimuli: • Probes (P or R in figures): Items which subject is suspected of knowing (e.g., murder weapons). Subject denies(lies). • Targets (TR) Items: Items to which subject presses ‘YES’ . (Benchmark P300). • Irrelevants (I or W in figures): Items of which subject has no knowledge and denies, honestly, by pressing ‘NO’ .

  5. How P300 amplitude is supposed to catch Liars: 1)P>I (‘BAD’) 2)P-TR corr >P-I corr(‘BC-AD’) 1)P=I 2)P-I corr >P-TR corr

  6. Whither R-TR correlation if there are latency differences? Probe P3 Target P3 Nothing should happen to bootstrapped amplitude difference test (BAD) but bootstrapped cross-correlation test (BC-AD) should fail.

  7. Experiment 1, based on Farwell & Donchin (1991): • --6 Different Probes • --Innocent, Guilty, and Countermeasure(CM) Groups • --Countermeasure: Associate various latent responses to different categories (jewelry type, drawer color, operation name, etc.), all irrelevant members of the category. • --”Off the Street “ subjects (Psych 101).

  8. General Instructions…. • Mock crime scenario • Press “Yes” to Targets (on list) • Press “No” to all other stimuli (Possibly guilty probes and Irrelevants).

  9. More simply…. • Probe Target I1 I2 I3I4ring bracelet necklace watch broach tiara • pink brown yellow purple red blue • donkey tiger lion cow pig horse • etc., etc…... (only half the matrix here.) • All these are shuffled, presented in random order, involving 4 repetitions of each item.

  10. What are the covert countermeasures for the 6 categories of 6 probes? • 1) Jewelry category……….micro right finger wiggle • 2) drawer lining category…. “ left “ “ • 3) owner’s name category…. “ “ toe “ • 4) operation name category…” right “ “ • 5) location of item category…… Imagine professor slaps you • 6) desktop category……………Do Nothing • I.e., make irrelevants into relevant targets.

  11. Guilty group: Probe(R) > Irrelevant (W). R > W

  12. Guilty Group: TR vs R Both have P300

  13. Innocent Group: R vs W Both lack P300

  14. Innocent Group: TR vs R TR towers over P (R)

  15. CM Group : R vs W No difference P(R) vs I (W)

  16. CM Group: Tr vs R Target > Probe

  17. Results, Exp. 1: CM works, and analysis method matters: Diagnoses of Guilty Amplitude Difference (BAD) method,p=.1 Innocent Group Guilty Group CM Group 9/11(82%) 1/11(9%) 2/11(18%) Cross-Correlation(BC-AD) Method, p=.1 6/11(54%) 0/11(0%) 6/11(54%) --with “Off the street”subjects; see next 2 slides.

  18. Guilty Subject, probe(R) vs irrelevant(W) R >> W: subject clearly guilty

  19. …but clear latency shift in TR and R P300s ..so BC-AD fails, BAD catches the S.

  20. Do Reaction Times help? CM Group Guilty Group 9/10 90% BAD 3/10* 30% BART * These are guilty calls based on bootstrapped (Probe-Irrelevant) RTs, at p =.05 . * Bootstrapped Analysis of RT difference, R-W.

  21. Absolute Irrel. RTs for CM and Inno. Groups overlap*. ..and 3 fastest CM-ers beat tes, 3 slowest did not *I.e., they don’t help either.

  22. Experiment 2: The one probe protocol (Rosenfeld et al., 1991). • 100% simpler to conceptualize: • There are 6 items, repeated 30-40 times randomly, consisting of.. • A probe, subject maybe guilty, • A target to force attention (not really necessary but allows us to test Farwell cross-correlation method vs. ours.) • 4 irrelevants.

  23. Standard autobiographical oddball paradigm. • 6 dates are presented, one is the birth date. • 5 other dates with no personal significance, one is a target, four are irrelevant. • Subject is feigning head injury, the inability to recognize birth date 50% of the time, so he presses yes and no to all dates on 50-50 basis.

  24. Design: • One group of advanced Ss run in 3 successive weeks. (Also Control group.) • Week 1: All naïve(about CM) and guilty (of having birth date and recognizing it despite overt lies. • Week 2: Use explicit countermeasure (to be explained). • Week 3: Repeat first week, stop the CM.

  25. What’s the CM? • When you see the first Irrelevant, do micro left finger wiggle. • When you see second Irrelevant, do micro right toe wiggle. • When you see third irrelevant, imagine me slapping your face. • When you see fourth Irrelevant, do nothing. • I.e., make irrels. into rel. targets.

  26. Results, week 1(guilty): Probe(R) vs.Irrelevant (W) As usual, R>>W

  27. Week 1: Probe(R) and Target(TR): Both have nice P3

  28. Week 2: Explicit CM, R v W Not so different anymore...

  29. Week 3: 5/12 test beaters(effortless), R v W: Surprise! R = W

  30. Week 3: 5/12 test beaters, R v TR--”classic defeats”: ..and TR >> R as with innocents.

  31. Exp. 2; quantitative. • WKBADBC-AD • no CM 12/13(.92) 9/13(.69) • CM 6/12(.50) 3/12(.25) • no CM 7/12(.58) 3/12(.25) • (Control group: nothing much happened over 3 weeks of repeating week 1.)

  32. RTs for 3 weeks; week 1= week 3, proving CM not usedin week 3.

  33. Irrelevant RTs, with and without CM. No overlap!

  34. But in week 3, RT no help, as we saw...

  35. Overall amplitude effects...

  36. Conclusions, bottom lines.. • 6-probe protocol beat-able, RT is no help, and the 6 probe combination lacks a real rationale anyway. (Lykken wouldn’t like?) • 1-probe protocol may be explicitly beat-able, but the very slow Irrelevant RT distribution will raise suspicions. 1 probe per run is more Lykkenable. • BUT---1-probe paradigm after CM practice is beat-able, period.

  37. What to do? • We have found(submitted) that within individuals, the scaled scalp distribution method detects 73% (not great) using statistical criteria yielding 0 % false positives. • This method should be worked on, because there is no obvious CM as there is with simple amplitude.

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