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Dedicated
Polygraph
Testing

 

Elena Berins 

Certified Polygraph Examiner, MS, APA, CAPE, ARDMS 

10736 Jefferson Blvd., #513, Culver City, CA 90230

Multiple office locations.

Open to public

Get the truth you need, when you need it!

phone: 747-200-5801
call or text your zip code to find the closest office location 

All exams include a FREE practice test and a FREE 3-page polygraph report

OUR SERVICES:

Services
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We work only with professional grade equipment and apply only APA approved polygraph testing methods
Affiliated with the Global Polygraph Network - https://www.polytest.org/
 

About
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What is a  polygraph test?

Polygraph tests are based on computerized or mechanical instrument tracings of the client's physiological responses to the test questions. Such responses appear as physiological reactions to the psychological processing of the test questions. Specific types of psycho-physiological reactions to lying in humans have been studied for many centuries and have been scientifically proven.

 

Polygraph instrument records changes in a person's respiration, skin electrical activity, blood pressure and heart rate changes, as well as the changes in the amount of peripheral blood (ex. fingertips), all of which reflect the client's physiological reactions to the test questions.

 

Test questions are carefully formulated by the examiner together with the examinee based on the issue at hand. The questions are explained in detail to the examinee and are never a "surprise". All questions are discussed and agreed upon before the test begins.

Mutual respect, understanding, honesty and collaboration between the examiner and the examinee are necessary to build personal trust, formulate correct questions and obtain quality polygraph charts.

 

Nervousness and anxiety of the examinee are acceptable and expected, and do not affect the score or cause one to "fail" the exam.

 

The test data are then evaluated by the polygraph examiner based on the scoring formulas assigned to different exam types. The "hand scores" are then compared to the computerized scoring of the charts to render the final decision.

 

Test results can fall into three categories: "pass", "fail", and "no opinion", depending on the score.

 

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