Title: Countermeasures to P300-based Guilty Knowledge Tests of Deception
1Countermeasures to P300-based Guilty Knowledge
Tests of Deception
- J.Peter Rosenfeld, Matt Soskins,Joanna Blackburn,
Ann Mary Robertson - Northwestern University.
- Supported by DoDPI
2Some 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) Its
about time.
32) Farwells web page, claiming 100 accuracy
4Stimuli
- 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 .
5How P300 amplitude is supposed to catch Liars
1)PgtI (BAD) 2)P-TR corr gtP-I corr(BC-AD)
1)PI 2)P-I corr gtP-TR corr
6Whither 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.
7Experiment 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).
8General Instructions.
- Mock crime scenario
- Press Yes to Targets (on list)
- Press No to all other stimuli (Possibly guilty
probes and Irrelevants).
9More simply.
- Probe Target I1 I2 I3 I4 ring
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.
10What are the covert countermeasures for the 6
categories of 6 probes?
- 1) Jewelry category.micro right finger wiggle
- 2) drawer lining category. left
- 3) owners name category. toe
- 4) operation name category right
- 5) location of item category Imagine professor
slaps you - 6) desktop categoryDo Nothing
- I.e., make irrelevants into relevant targets.
11Guilty group Probe(R) gt Irrelevant (W).
R gt W
12Guilty Group TR vs R
Both have P300
13Innocent Group R vs W
Both lack P300
14Innocent Group TR vs R
TR towers over P (R)
15CM Group R vs W
No difference P(R) vs I (W)
16CM Group Tr vs R
Target gt Probe
17Results, 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.
18Guilty Subject, probe(R) vs irrelevant(W)
R gtgt W subject clearly guilty
19but clear latency shift in TR and R P300s
..so BC-AD fails, BAD catches the S.
20Experiment 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.
21Standard 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.
22Design
- 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.
23Whats 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.
24Results, week 1(guilty) Probe(R) vs.Irrelevant
(W)
As usual, RgtgtW
25Week 1 Probe(R) and Target(TR)
Both have nice P3
26Week 2 Explicit CM, R v W
Not so different anymore...
27Week 3 5/12 test beaters(effortless), R v W
Surprise! R W
28Week 3 5/12 test beaters, R v TR--classic
defeats
..and TR gtgt R as with innocents.
29Exp. 2 quantitative.
- WK BAD BC-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.)
30RTs for 3 weeks week 1 week 3, proving CM not
used in week 3.
31Conclusions, bottom lines..
- 6-probe protocol beat-able, RT is no help, and
the 6 probe combination lacks a real rationale
anyway. (Lykken wouldnt 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.
32Farwell (SPR 08) didnt agree
33But at the meeting, his letter, not he, showed up
34What to do?
- Go to a new paradigmthe Complex Trial Protocol
(Rosenfeld et al., 2008)