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44 J. Crim. L. Criminology & Police Sci. 104 (1953-1954)
Behavior Symptoms of Lie-Detector Subjects

handle is hein.journals/jclc44 and id is 116 raw text is: BEHAVIOR SYMPTOMS OF LIE-DETECTOR SUBJECTS
John E. Reid and Richard 0. Arther
John E. Reid, Director of John E. Reid & Associates, has made a number of note-
worthy contributions to the field of lie detection. This is his third article to appear
in this Journal. His previous ones were Simulated Blood Pressure Responses in Lie
Detector Tests and a Method for Their Detection (Vol. 36, No. 1) and A Revised
Questioning Technique in Lie Detection Tests (Vol. 37, No. 6).
Richard 0. Arther is a graduate of Michigan State College with a B.S. degree
in Police Administration. In 1951 following his graduation, he pursued the study
of scientific lie detection at John E. Reid and Associates for six months, and since
then, he has been a member of the staff of that organization.
This paper here presented will appear in the forthcoming third edition of Lie
Detection and Criminal Interrogation by Fred E. Inbau and John E. Reid.-EDITOR.
Every competent lie-detector examiner must have observed instances
where a subject's general conduct and unsolicited statements before,
during, and after a test seemed to indicate his guilt or innocence regard-
ing the matter under investigation. In order to make an evaluation
of such conduct and statements, a five-year study of a large number
of subjects in a variety of case situations was undertaken at the labora-
tory of John E. Reid and Associates. During this time the behavior
reactions and statements of these subjects were closely observed and
immediately written into the case file. The final evaluation of the
study had to be confined, of course, to the subjects whose guilt or inno-
cence had been verified by trustworthy confessions. In its ultimate
analysis the study was based upon observations and data regarding
486 verified guilty and 323 verified innocent subjects who were suspected
of various criminal offenses.
The behavior symptoms of the guilty and the innocent were found
to differ widely in some respects, while in others they were quite simi-
lar. Naturally, no specific type of behavior-even though it is highly
typical of one or the other group-should ever be considered proof
of guilt or innocence, because there are or may be some exceptions
to each general rule. Nevertheless, an examiner will find it helpful at
times to consider the probable significance of a subject's behavior
pattern.
BEHAVIOR SYMPTOMS OF THE GUILTY
As might be assumed, a guilty subject is usually far from anxious
to take a lie-detector test. None of the 486 verified guilty subjects
examined during the five-year study period had requested the lie-detector
test. In a few instances, however, an effort was made to deceive the
examiner into believing that the subject himself was the one who orig-
inally  uggested the test.

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