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Pozycja Decision Accuracy for the Relevant_Irrelevant Screening Test: Influence of an Algorithm on Human Decision_Making(Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM, 2015) Krapohl, Donald J.; Goodson, Walt"The Relevant-Irrelevant (RI) has been used as a polygraph screening technique by several decades longer than any other. It has demonstrated practical value in prompting self-report from applicants and employees of behaviours of interest to employers. The RI has certain strengths that have made it an attractive alternative (Krapohl & Shaw 2015). With no comparison questions, the RI is not subject to criticisms that the examiner must manipulate the examinee in some fashion to make the technique effective, as probable-lie comparison question techniques may. It is more flexible than most other methods, accommodating from two to five relevant questions in a single test series. The RI may also be more resistant to countermeasures, at least of the type in which examinees induce reactions to comparison questions. "(...)Pozycja European Polygraph 2022, Volume 16, Number 1 (55)(Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM, 2022) Horvath, Frank; Peters, Robert; Gołaszewski, Marcin; Wilcox, Daniel T.; Berry, Rosalind; Grove, Emma; Pérez-Campos Mayoral, Eduardo; Fisher, Ronald; Langer, Arre Anne; Pérez-Campos, Eduardo Lorenzo; Pérez-Campos Mayoral, Laura; Hernandez-Huerta, María Teresa; Matias-Cervantes, Carlos AlbertoPozycja European Polygraph no. 1 (39), 2017(Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM, 2017) Leśniak, Barbara; Leśniak, Marek; Widacki, Jan; Szuba-Boroń, Anna; Amsel, Tuvya T.; Widacki, JanPozycja Polygraph Testing and Social Intolerance: A Warning to Examiners Outside of the United States(Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM, 2022) Horvath, Frank; Peters, RobertThe use of polygraph testing in the applicant screening process for law enforcement positions is widely accepted in the United States and elsewhere. Generally, that testing includes questions related to past behaviors such as involvement in criminal activity, use of illegal drugs, falsified background information, employment misconduct and so forth. More recently some have advocated that such testing ought to include questions related to ‘social intolerance.” In this paper we argue that testing for such ‘intolerance’ is highly objectionable and is likely to encourage efforts to prohibit polygraph testing, especially so outside of the United States.