• Login
Strong Article
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Investing
  • World
  • Technology
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Submit Article
No Result
View All Result
SUBSCRIBE
Strong Article
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Investing
  • World
  • Technology
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Submit Article
No Result
View All Result
Strong Article
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

New lie-detector test uses eye tracking technology – Deseret News

Muhammad Mubeen by Muhammad Mubeen
May 9, 2022
in Business, Small Business
0
New lie-detector test uses eye tracking technology – Deseret News
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Converus CEO Todd Mickelsen is reflected in employee Adam Johnson’s eye at his Lehi office on Friday, April 22, 2022. Converus has designed a lie detector that measures bio-cognitive responses, such as changes in pupil diameter, eye movement, eye blinks, and fixations.
Laura Seitz, Deseret News

You might also like

Is WhatsApp safe? What to know to keep your data secure – Business Insider

Cruise News Today — June 13, 2022 [VIDEO] – Cruise Radio

Massachusetts public health officials confirm case of monkeypox – Mass.gov

Todd Mickelsen has caught all four Utah members of the U.S. House of Representatives lying.
He’s also caught the undersecretary of the Department of Defense lying, and Mike Pence’s domestic policy adviser when Pence was vice president, in addition to numerous other senators, members of Congress, and officials with government agencies, including the FBI, National Security Agency and CIA.
So what’s his secret? Pry their fingernails off? Waterboarding? Truth serum?
Nope.
He looks them in the eyes.
Or more exactly, a computer looks them in the eyes.
The system is called EyeDetect and it involves a computer program that can capture and decipher eye activity down to the millisecond.
Lying, it turns out, takes more effort than telling the truth. You have to think harder, causing your pupils to get larger. All this is detected microscopically in a 15-minute EyeDetect test created by the Lehi-based company Converus, of which Mickelsen is CEO.
To demonstrate that EyeDetect works — and to lobby support for the technology — Mickelsen has given hundreds of what he calls “the numbers test” to influencers in the federal government such as those listed above.
He asks the testee to pick a number between two and nine, write it down and not show it to anyone.
Then he turns on the computer and the EyeDetect program takes over, asking a series of questions. If the chosen number is, say, four, every time a question asks if four was written down the respondent must lie; for questions about every other number, he can tell the truth.
With a success rate above 90%, EyeDetect predicts the hidden number virtually every time.
* * *
Converus CEO Todd Mickelsen is photographed at his Lehi office on Friday, April 22, 2022. Converus has designed a lie detector that measures biocognitive responses, such as changes in pupil diameter, eye movement, eye blinks, and fixations.
Laura Seitz, Deseret News
The technology behind EyeDetect can be traced back to a hike two University of Utah psychology professors took on Mount Rainier in 2001.
Besides being avid mountain climbers, John Kircher and David Raskin are two of the world’s most foremost experts on lie detection. It was their work in 1991 that created the computerized polygraph, the first significant improvement to the original polygraph machine invented way back in 1921.
But polygraph exams, via computer or otherwise, are unwieldy, requiring wires and blood pressure cuffs and at least 90 minutes for the test. As the two Ph.D.s were hiking, they mused about coming up with something that could detect lies faster and with less trouble — something computer based.
That led to a collaboration with Anne Cook, their colleague at the U., who was using an eye-tracking machine to conduct experiments on what the eyes could tell us about such things as memory and reading comprehension.
Two more University of Utah professors, Douglas Hacker and Dan Woltz, joined the effort, and between their combined brain power and a decade of research, the five of them came up with a cheaper and faster way of detecting lies by measuring cognitive change through the eyes, in contrast to the physiological change measured by the traditional polygraph machine.
In 2013, a group of investors acquired the rights to the technology from the university, brought the five professors on board as their science team, and started their company, Converus, to share this lie-detection breakthrough with the world.
* * *
Converus CEO Todd Mickelsen works at his Lehi office on Friday, April 22, 2022. Converus has designed a lie detector that measures biocognitive responses, such as changes in pupil diameter, eye movement, eye blinks and fixations.
Laura Seitz, Deseret News
Almost 10 years later, Converus can be found in 60 countries, with more than 600 clients, ranging from police departments to therapy clinics to banks to law firms to any number of government agencies.
Here in the U.S., Converus has contracts with some 75 law enforcement agencies. Ten are in Utah, among them the sheriff’s offices in Utah, Davis and Cache counties and the Salt Lake City Police Department, where EyeDetect is used to screen new applicants. (According to Mickelsen, 32% of prospective cops fail on average, and 85% of the time it’s because they are not truthful about their past use of illegal drugs).
Because of strict privacy laws in the U.S., Converus does a big share of its business south of the border, in countries where corruption is a larger part of the culture and legal restraints aren’t as stringent.
Mickelsen cites the example of Acceso Credito, a Peruvian lending institution that deals primarily in car loans.
Since there is no credit bureau in Peru, the way Acceso Credito vetted prospective customers was by going to their homes, contacting their employers and conducting personal interviews to determine if they were a good risk for a loan — a laborious effort that took weeks.
The company eliminated this lengthy vetting process by placing EyeDetect laptops in 50 car dealers it does business with, requiring anyone applying for credit to first take a 15-minute eye test.
The result? “Three years ago, 30% of their folks were defaulting,” says Mickelsen. “Now it’s 5%.”
Then there’s the example of the Servicio de Administración Tributaria, Mexico’s equivalent of the IRS. For years, the agency’s auditors routinely took bribes. It was an open secret; just part of the culture. But that all changed when the agency secured the services of Converus.
“The agency came out and said (to its auditors), ‘We all know you’re taking bribes,’” says Mickelsen. “We’re not going to ask about the past. But as of June 1 everyone will be subjected to EyeDetect tests. That test will ask, ‘Since June 1 have you taken a bribe?’
“They cleaned it right up. Some people, when they were scheduled for their test, just didn’t show up.
“It became a deterrent. Statistics show that 70% of theft and corruption that occurs in business could be avoided if you just put in place deterrents like eye detection.”
Mickelsen’s hope is that in the future Converus will be able to do more work with federal agencies in the U.S., accounting for the many government officials he’s talked into taking his numbers test.
Mickelsen reports the politicians are routinely amazed when EyeDetect, like a magician with a card trick, correctly guesses their number. But this is no trick. This is their own pupils telling on them.
“It turns out the eyes,” he says, “really are the window to the soul.”

Romaisa Khan (TikTok Star) Age, Height, Biography, Family, Drama & More
Trending
Romaisa Khan (TikTok Star) Age, Height, Biography, Family, Drama & More

By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Notice and European users agree to the data transfer policy.
Copyright © 2022 Deseret News Publishing Company. All Rights Reserved

source

Share30Tweet19
Muhammad Mubeen

Muhammad Mubeen

Recommended For You

Is WhatsApp safe? What to know to keep your data secure – Business Insider

by Muhammad Mubeen
July 8, 2022
0
Is WhatsApp safe? What to know to keep your data secure – Business Insider

With about 2 billion monthly active users, WhatsApp is the single most active and popular mobile messenger app. That kind of popularity tends to make software vulnerable, which...

Read more

Cruise News Today — June 13, 2022 [VIDEO] – Cruise Radio

by Muhammad Mubeen
June 14, 2022
0
Cruise News Today — June 13, 2022 [VIDEO] – Cruise Radio

For the first time in nearly a decade, Carnival Cruise Line sailed from Dover, England on Friday. Carnival Pride departed on a nine-night Norwegian Fjord cruise with multiple...

Read more

Massachusetts public health officials confirm case of monkeypox – Mass.gov

by Muhammad Mubeen
June 14, 2022
0
Massachusetts public health officials confirm case of monkeypox – Mass.gov

Official websites use .mass.govA .mass.gov website belongs to an official government organization in Massachusetts. Secure websites use HTTPS certificateA lock icon ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely...

Read more

May 30, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news – CNN

by Muhammad Mubeen
June 14, 2022
0
May 30, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news – CNN

source

Read more

Rupee's Recovery Against US Dollar Slows Down After World Bank's GDP Forecast – ProPakistani

by Muhammad Mubeen
June 14, 2022
0
Rupee's Recovery Against US Dollar Slows Down After World Bank's GDP Forecast – ProPakistani

Rupee's Recovery Against US Dollar Slows Down After World Bank's GDP Forecast  ProPakistanisource

Read more
Next Post
Spot gold may retest support at $1,867 – Business Recorder

Spot gold may retest support at $1,867 - Business Recorder

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

Freddie Freeman agrees to six-year, $162 million deal with Los Angeles Dodgers – USA TODAY

Freddie Freeman agrees to six-year, $162 million deal with Los Angeles Dodgers – USA TODAY

March 18, 2022
Here's the case for buying Netflix's stock now – MarketWatch

Here's the case for buying Netflix's stock now – MarketWatch

June 6, 2022
Female Entrepreneurs Who Confront a Particular Kind of Troll – The New York Times

Female Entrepreneurs Who Confront a Particular Kind of Troll – The New York Times

March 7, 2022

Browse by Category

Ads Blog | Blog Roll

Slot Online
News Week
B2B Guru Class
Target Crypto
The Kontent
Hufforbes
Strong Article
ADVERTISEMENT
August 2022
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« Jun    
ADVERTISEMENT
Strong Article

Strong Article is an ultimate website news portal covering most happening news across the World, business, technology, entertainment, and inventions. This platform is revealing things in an engaging way to improve your knowledge on what is going on across the globe.

Contact us: mubeenh782(@)gmail(dot)com
Telegram:Qualitybacklinks
Whatsapp:+923111339715


CATEGORIES

  • Brand
  • Business
  • Celebrated
  • Crypto
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Features
  • Finance
  • Foods
  • Gambling
  • Health
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Life style
  • Markets
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Pet
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Relationships
  • Small Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • World

RECENT POSTS

  • Romaisa Khan (TikTok Star) Age, Height, Biography, Family, Drama & More
  • On the web Football Betting
  • How to Get Wealthy Enjoying the On line Lottery!
  • Choosing Your Form of On line Gambling Web site
  • Baseball Betting Tutorial – Improve Your Chances of Winning

Copyright ©2016. All rights reserved. Strong Article News

No Result
View All Result
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Investing
  • World
  • Technology
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Submit Article

Copyright ©2016. All rights reserved. Strong Article News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?