Abstract
Screening individuals for concealed knowledge has traditionally been the purview of professional interrogators investigating a crime. But the ability to detect when a person is hiding important information would be of high value to many other fields and functions. This dissertation proposes design principles for and reports on an implementation and empirical evaluation of a non-invasive, automated system for human screening. The screening system design (termed an automated screening kiosk or ASK) is patterned after a standard interviewing method called the Concealed Information Test (CIT), which is built on theories explaining psychophysiological and behavioral effects of human orienting and defensive responses. As part of testing the ASK proof of concept, I propose and empirically examine alternative indicators of concealed knowledge in a CIT. Specifically, I propose kinesic rigidity as a viable cue, propose and instantiate an automated method for capturing rigidity, and test its viability using a traditional CIT experiment. I also examine oculomotor behavior using a mock security screening experiment using an ASK system design. Participants in this second experiment packed a fake improvised explosive device (IED) in a bag and were screened by an ASK system. Results indicate that the ASK design, if implemented within a highly controlled framework such as the CIT, has potential to overcome barriers to more widespread application of concealed knowledge testing in government and business settings.
Recommended Citation
Twyman, N. W. (2012). Automated Human Screening for Detecting Concealed Knowledge. The University of Arizona.
Department(s)
Business and Information Technology
Keywords and Phrases
Deception Detection; Eye Tracking; Oculometrics; Security Screening; Management Information Systems; Body Movement; CIT
Document Type
Dissertation - Open Access
Document Version
Final Version
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2012 Nathan W. Twyman, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Jan 2012