poly mid
  • 1. The first collection of civil regulation in Ancient Rus' known as
A) Battle for truth
B) Russkaya Pravda
  • 2. itis used in testing forlocating the suspect and the stolen items
A) Truth serum
B) Hypnotism
  • 3. the basic practice is to present orally or visually a group of words each
    word sufficiently separated in time from the others so that subjects response to it
A) Polygraph
B) Word association
  • 4. wrote an essay entitled,
    “An Effectual Scheme for the Preventing of Street
    Robberies and Suppressing all other Disorders of the Night” where he suggested the use of
    body pulse todetectdeception. Defoe's essay calleduponthe attentionof many scientists to
    employmedicalscienceinthefightagainstcrime.
A) Cesare lombroso
B) Daniel defoe
  • 5. In1895, anItalianCriminologist andtutorofAngelo Mosso,published the
    second edition of his book entitled (Criminal Man) and started
    experimentingwithpulseandbloodpressurechangesasverificationoftruthinanswersgiven
    to questions by actual criminal suspects. He relates the use of hydrosphygmograph, a water
    pressurerecordingthatmeasureschanges inbloodpressure andpulse rate ofthesuspect, and
    calledit
A) Daniel defoe
B) Cesare lombroso
  • 6. In 1878, science came to the aid oftruth seekers through the research of an
    Italian psychologist named Angelo Mosso. He made use of an instrument called
    in his research on emotion and fear and its influence on the heart and
    respirationHis observations subsequently formedthe basis fordetection.
A) Cesare bacarria
B) Angelo mosso
  • 7. in 1879, introduced the using a series of
    irrelevant questions and relevant questions separated in time. The theory of this testis that a
    guiltysubjectreactsonlytorelevantquestions,andaninnocentshowsnoreactions.
A) Mark david
B) Francis galton
  • 8. an English clinician and cardiologist, constructed the
    in 1892 This was an instrument to be used for medical examinations with the
    capability tosimultaneously recordundulatedline tracings ofthe vascular pulses (radial pulse
    locatedaboutaninchalong fromthebaseofthethumbor wristarea,venouspulselocatedin
    the neck and arterial pulse is the abrupt expansion of an artery and the peak is known as
    systolicbloodpressure),bywayofastylusontoarevolvingdrumof smokedpaper.
A) Sir James Mackenzie
B) Sir Mark Mackenzie
  • 9. He developed the metal bellows and the kymograph
    that pulled a6 chartpaper at a constant speed underrecording pens froma roll of
    chartlocatedinside theinstrumen
A) Leonarde keeler
B) Leonardo keeler
  • 10. . It is the one responsible for regulating mechanism that corrects the slightest deviation
    from a particular standard within very fine limits. Sleeps, oxygenation of the blood, levels of
    potassium, sodium, calcium magnesium and all the essential chemical substances that maintain
    the activity of all cell membranes are finely adjusted.
A) Ans
B) Als
C) Ams
  • 11. This is found at the center of the brain
A) Autonomic nervous system
B) Hypothalamus
  • 12. In polygraph testing, the receptor is the ear of the subject,
    which receives the threatening question or stimulus from the polygraphist. The stimulus is
    transmitted from the ears via sensory neurons into the brain where the hypothalamus analyzes,
    evaluates, and resolves that particular question. It makes a decision for the subject as to
    whether it is a threatening situation.
A) Sympathetic division
B) Parasympathetic division
  • 13. Causes the arterioles in certain parts of the body to constrict. Thereby preventing blood from entering
    those areas where it is not immediately needed.
A) epinephrine
B) norepinephrine
  • 14. It is functionally antagonistic to the sympathetic nervous system. Its role is to maintain
    the homeostasis of the body necessary for normal functioning. Therefore, it follows to re-
    establish the chemical balance of the body.
A) Parasympathetic division
B) Sympathetic division
  • 15. Also known as secret hormones
A) epinephrine
B) norepinephrine
C) Both
  • 16. These are non-verbal behavior that expresses the entire communication. No
    spoken words are necessary.
A) Illustrators
B) Emblems
  • 17. are non-verbal behaviors which assist the listener better understand the verbal
    communication. They indicate consistency between non-verbal and verbal messages. Since the
    speaker is attempting to assist the listener in understanding what is being said, as illustrators
    increase, the probability of truthfulness increases. As they decreases, or suddenly stop, the
    possibility of deception increases.
A) Illustrators
B) Emblems
  • 18. are non-verbal behaviors that serve no purpose in helping verbal communication,
    and often detract from it. They are indicators of deception. As with illustrators, adapters often
    occur as hand gestures and body position and include any type of rubbing, stroking, picking,
    massaging, or touching of the body or face.
A) Illustrators
B) Emblems
C) Adapter
  • 19. Truthful people usually use body position as illustrators and have an open,
    settled, upright position. Often, they will lean slightly forward, indicating interest in what is
    being said. Shoulders tend to remain squared and the body is aligned with the interviewers.
A) General posture
B) Position
  • 20. The face is the most common part of the body to observe; however, it is also
    the most difficult to interpret. It has a very complex muscular structure and can show more than
    one emotion at a time. In addition, people know that we look at their faces when they speak,
    and false facial expressions are easy to produce, which can become automatic after time.
A) Posture
B) Head and face
  • 21. eye behavior provides an excellent source of non-verbal information. Breaks in eye
    contact, which occur at the appropriate time, can be indicative of deception. Exaggerated eye
    contact is likely to be masking behavior and should be considered an indicator of the deceptive.
    People who maintain eye-to-eye contact too long are trying to replicate sincerity, or attempting
    to dominate you.
A) Eye
B) General posture
C) Head and face
  • 22. Under times of stress the body's senses are enhanced by
    sympathetic arousal. A person's olfactory (smelling), aural (hearing) visual (sight), and tactile
    (touch and skin sensitivity) perceptions are noticeably increased. These changes in the blood
    flow to the organs cause an increased itching sensation resulting in subconscious scratching.
    Touching or scratching the nose is a reliable indicator of deception when it is done as the suspect
    answers a critical question, or is explaining something.
A) Face and head
B) Sense Arousal Gestures
  • 23. is generally used as an investigative aid/technical aid in the
    investigative process. It is used to verify if the statement of the victims/complainant, establish
    the credibility of the witnesses, evaluates the truthfulness of the suspects. It is also used for
    pre-employment screening and loyalty check of personnel, security risk such as leakage of
    information and counter-intelligence, infractions of criminal law, misconduct, and used in
    medical measurements.
A) Polygraph examination
B) Lie detection
  • 24. The polygraph machine is mechanically capable of making
    graphical records containing reliable information regarding physiological changes.
A) The Mechanical Basic Premise
B) The Physiological Basic Premise
  • 25. Among the physiological changes that may be recorded and
    identified are those that automatically occur only following the stimulation of specific nervous
    system component and from which stimulation of those specific nervous system components
    can be reliably diagnosed.
A) The Mechanical Basic Premise
B) The Physiological Basic Premise
  • 26. caused by the contraction of the diaphragm and expansion of the chest
    cavity that results in the air rushing into the lungs.
A) Inspiration
B) Expiration
  • 27. caused by relaxation of the diaphragm and contraction of the chest cavity
    resulting in the air rushing out of the lungs.
A) Inspiration
B) Expiration
  • 28. hey exist when
    the heart is contracted and the values are open with the blood rushing into the arteries,
A) Systolic or high pressure
B) Diastolic or Low pressure
  • 29. Normal blood pressure
A) 100/90
B) 130/80
C) 120/80
  • 30. accelerates the beat
A) sympathetic set
B) the cranial Autonomic
  • 31. which retard the beat.
A) the cranial Autonomic
B) sympathetic se
  • 32. This is the most current popular name for the human body phenomenon in which the
    body, mainly the skin, changes resistance electrically upon the application of certain external
    stimuli. It consists of two categories - Normal Response and Abnormal Response.
A) Physical movement response
B) Electrodermal response
  • 33. Interference abnormal response that originates in Step 2 (fright to
    the machine) of the reaction chain or situational fright. It appears on the first question or so and
    no longer appears throughout the test
A) Machine Fright Response
B) . Physical Movement Response
  • 34. Interfering response originating in step 1 of the reaction
    chain in the form of unwanted auditory or stimuli. The slamming of the door or the ringing of
    the telephone, a cough or sneeze by spectators in the room, or any unusual noise to which the
    subject is not accustomed at the location, will usually produce outside interference response.
A) Mental Tie-up Response
B) . Outside Interference Response
  • 35. Interfering response which originates between step 2 (machine
    fright) and step 3 (emotion) in the reaction chain. Another name is guilt complex.
A) Physical Movement Response
B) Mental Tie-up Response
  • 36. Abnormalities as a result of telling a lie (more on psychological and
    such also is accompanied by physical changes).
A) Mental Tie-up Response
B) Deception response
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