Independent, peer-reviewed research validates accuracy of the CVSA

LEWES, Del., May 6, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — According to the National Association of Computer Voice Stress Analysts (NACVSA), a recently published research study in the 2012 annual edition of the scientific journal Criminalistics and Court Expertise reports the accuracy rate of the Computer Voice Stress Analyzer (CVSA®) is greater than 95%, an assertion long made […]

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LEWES, Del., May 6, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — According to the National Association of Computer Voice Stress Analysts (NACVSA), a recently published research study in the 2012 annual edition of the scientific journal Criminalistics and Court Expertise reports the accuracy rate of the Computer Voice Stress Analyzer (CVSA®) is greater than 95%, an assertion long made by the system’s manufacturer. The study’s results are further bolstered by current US Government funded voice analysis research, which has established voice technologies performed well for border security applications.

The CVSA has been available to law enforcement agencies in the US since 1988, first as an analog device, and since 1997 in a digital version. The CVSA is the only Voice Stress Analyzer in the world with two US Patents and the only system worldwide incorporating the FACT® scoring algorithm, which uses scientifically validated processes to reliably and precisely evaluate the results of CVSA examinations. The CVSA is now used by close to 2,000 law enforcement agencies including major metropolitan agencies such as Atlanta, Nashville, Miami, Baltimore, and New Orleans as well as the U.S. Federal Courts. The California Highway Patrol has used the CVSA for over 15 years and it is now the most widely used truth verification system in the US.

Other advantages of the CVSA are that, unlike the old polygraph, there are no known countermeasures to defeat it and it has no inconclusive results. Additionally, drugs don’t affect it and it can be used in virtually any environment.

The 18-year field study was conducted by Professor James L. Chapman and titled “Long-Term Field Evaluation of Voice Stress Analysis In a North American Criminal Justice Setting.” Professor Chapman was known as the world’s foremost authority on the application of Voice Stress Analysis technologies. Recently deceased, Professor Chapman’s career spanned over 40 years as a criminologist, educator and researcher, during which he conducted more than 15,000 Voice Stress Analysis examinations. The study’s co-author, Marigo Stathis, a neuroscientist and research analyst, has been the primary or co-author of 27 published scientific articles and studies focusing on various topics related to the human brain and biology.

Professor Chapman used the CVSA to conduct the research and the results achieved were highly consistent throughout the period the study’s data were collected. The study’s findings revealed the CVSA, when used as an investigative support tool, can accurately predict whether a person under investigation is being truthful or deceptive. The study’s findings are supported by scientifically accepted statistical models, and by the 96.4% validated confession rate Professor Chapman attained during the course of the 18-year study. According to current scientific research and meta-analyses, police confession rates worldwide vary between 20-45%, with even the most experienced police interviewers only achieving a 50-55% confession rate. Empirical data collected by the CVSA’s manufacturer, US law enforcement and US military CVSA users have long supported such findings; however, this is the first independent and peer-reviewed scientific study to validate these data. Additional studies and research are planned for the future.

Article: Market Watch