TER General Board

Uh...........
socrates17 1 Reviews 5365 reads
posted

Wouldn't that method also screen out newbies who were experiencing a natural nervousness at contacting a provider?

This may be a useful device for assessing the truth of statements over the phone, when screening prospective clients or vixens.

Google brings up many hits and articles about voice stress analysis. This one, Chicagospies.com/lie.shtml has for sale under $Ben devices that can be used with the phone or PC.
I may buy one for screening new providers and avoiding ripoffs.

Now I just need to com up with a list of good questions. Hmmmm.
What would be the five most important questions to ask, before starting to sound like a cross-examiner?
1/ Are those recent and accurate pictures of you on Eros?
2/ Is your donation $ amount all inclusive for complete and full service, or do you usually try to get more $?
3/ Do you provide a relaxed sensuous session for almost all of the hour, or do you try to finish as early as possible?
4/ Do you enjoy extended foreplay and bbj?
5/ Do you fake orgasms? LOL

Of course there have not been massive hard science studies of the value of VSA, so there is some room for skepticism. Such studies are hugely expensive, and are often never done when something works well in practice and is plausible. Fingerprints are a good example. Polygraphs can  be beaten, maybe VSA too, but I would not know. However, most valuable innovations in science come long before the validating studies. The absence of a large peer reviewed study proves nothing, only that such a study has not been done for one reason or the other, usually expense or lack of a felt necessity.
We know as a fact that LE lie and have phony IDs, but that topic is not easy to study. LE would not likely suspect a provider to have VSA on her phone, and therefore would lie more readily without being on guard. I'm looking forward to cell phones with VSA someday.

-- Modified on 5/25/2002 10:07:51 AM

A post below describes how San Diego LE who busted Debbie Moon had Navy ID and call back & caller ID that showed the Navy Base.
All she needed was to ask the guy if he was really Navy, or SD LE, and with Voice Stress hooked up, the lie would show up on the screen in front of her, assuming it works.
Imagine having VS installed in your cell phone with a little graph screen!
Cops do lie in and out of court, probably more than any group of witnesses, but that may and should show up in the voice pattern, especially if you have a question that surprises them, such as: How long did you train for vice at the police academy? If you force a cop to try to think, it messes up their brain waves big time. LOL
Ask a few trick questions about donuts!

-- Modified on 5/24/2002 5:41:36 PM

-- Modified on 5/24/2002 8:11:02 PM

2sense4573 reads

From what I've read, I don't think there's very much science behind it.

A lot of what passes as "forensic" science (e.g., voice-stress, lie-detector, even finger-prints), has never been subjected to the rigors of peer-reviewed publication.

Wouldn't that method also screen out newbies who were experiencing a natural nervousness at contacting a provider?

In the first place, newby nervousness is not necessarily lying, and further conversation can clarify doubts.
Almost all who undergo polygraphs are nervous as hell, whether innocent or guilty.
The VSA procedure can allow for that with various control questions.
A newby might fib about unimportant issues, but not about the nine questions in the additional post, above (or below).

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