Do you trust your mechanic?

EyeDetect®, by Converus® (http://converus.com), is an accurate, nonintrusive lie detection test that detects deception in 30 minutes by analyzing eye and other behaviors. It’s the first breakthrough in effectively uncovering lies since the polygraph was invented nearly 100 years ago. EyeDetect is also the world’s first ocular-motor deception test.

If your job has anything to do with credibility assessment (whether you work in law enforcement, the government, human resources) or if you’re simply interested in lie detection, then please SUBSCRIBE to this YouTube channel.

In this video, a TV station in San Antonio, TX reports on this innovative technology.

How does it work? EyeDetect uses a high-definition, infrared eye-tracking camera to monitor involuntary eye behavior — including pupil dilation, blink rate and fixations — to detect deception while a person answers true/false questions on a computer screen. The test takes 30 minutes and provides a “truthful” or “deceptive” score within 5 minutes. Polygraph exams, the long-time standard for lie detection, require a trained examiner, take at least 90 minutes to conduct, and reports can sometimes take hours to receive.

Field tests show that an EyeDetect test is 86% accurate. When used in conjunction with the polygraph, and when both tests have the same result, the confidence in the test outcome can be as high as 99%. This is unheard of in the lie detection industry.

Most companies, in countries where it’s legal to administer lie detection tests in the workplace, use EyeDetect tests for pre-employment screening of job candidates and periodic testing of current employees. EyeDetect is not only ideal for screening job candidates in government, law enforcement and corrections, but also for screening visa applicants, immigrants, sex offenders, probationers and parolees. For example, an important potential national security application of EyeDetect is screening Syrian refugees for terrorists.

Companies and government agencies throughout Latin America have been using EyeDetect since late 2014. Converus recently began offering EyeDetect to the U.S. market.

The main benefits of EyeDetect include:

  • 100% unbiased
  • High accuracy
  • Fast (only 30 minutes for a test)
  • Nonintrusive
  • Cost-effective
  • Portable

After the concept was conceived in 2002, a team of five scientists from the University of Utah spent more than 13 years fine-tuning this new ocular-motor based lie detection technology. Two of the five scientists, Drs. David Raskin and John Kircher, are not only world-renowned polygraph experts, but also credited with inventing the computerized polygraph.

Midas Uses Lie Detector to Prove Mechanics Are Honest

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About Converus®
Converus provides scientifically validated lie detection technologies. EyeDetect® detects deception at 90% accuracy in 30 minutes by analyzing eye and other behaviors. IdentityDetect™ detects falsified identities at 91% accuracy in 1-5 minutes by analyzing subtle variations in the motor nervous system responses. IntegrityDetect™ identifies the most trustworthy individuals at 80% accuracy in 6 minutes by analyzing a person’s implicit associations. These lie detector tests help protect countries, corporations and communities from corruption, fraud and threats. Converus is headquartered in Lehi, Utah, USA. Visit: http://converus.com

State of the art technology. A court judge in Texas, USA recently instructed an accused in a drug possession case to undergo an EyeDetect lie detection test!

The “blind number test” in action

EyeDetect®, by Converus® (http://converus.com), is an accurate, nonintrusive lie detection test that detects deception in 30 minutes by analyzing eye and other behaviors. It’s the first breakthrough in effectively uncovering lies since the polygraph was invented nearly 100 years ago. EyeDetect is also the world’s first ocular-motor deception test.

If your job has anything to do with credibility assessment (whether you work in law enforcement, the government, human resources) or if you’re simply interested in lie detection, then please SUBSCRIBE to this YouTube channel.

In this video, a TV station in San Antonio, TX reports on this innovative technology.

How does it work? EyeDetect has been called an Eye Polygraph.  EyeDetect uses a high-definition, infrared eye-tracking camera to monitor involuntary eye behavior — including pupil dilation, blink rate and fixations — to detect deception while a person answers true/false questions on a computer screen. The test takes 30 minutes and provides a “truthful” or “deceptive” score within 5 minutes. Polygraph exams, the long-time standard for lie detection, require a trained examiner, take at least 90 minutes to conduct, and reports can sometimes take hours to receive.

Field tests show EyeDetect is 86% accurate. When used in conjunction with the polygraph, and when both tests have the same result, the confidence in the test outcome can be as high as 99%. This is unheard of in the lie detection industry.

Most companies, in countries where it’s legal to administer lie detection tests in the workplace, use EyeDetect for pre-employment screening of job candidates and periodic testing of current employees. EyeDetect is not only ideal for screening job candidates in government, law enforcement and corrections, but also for screening visa applicants, immigrants, sex offenders, probationers and parolees. For example, an important potential national security application of EyeDetect is screening Syrian refugees for terrorists.

Companies and government agencies throughout Latin America have been using EyeDetect since late 2014. Converus recently began offering EyeDetect to the U.S. market.

The main benefits of EyeDetect include:

  • 100% unbiased
  • High accuracy
  • Fast (only 30 minutes for a test)
  • Nonintrusive
  • Cost-effective
  • Portable

After the concept was conceived in 2002, a team of five scientists from the University of Utah spent more than 13 years fine-tuning this new ocular-motor based lie detection technology. Two of the five scientists, Drs. David Raskin and John Kircher, are not only world-renowned polygraph experts, but also credited with inventing the computerized polygraph.

The “blind number test” in action. This test is 96% accurate in identifying the correct number picked by a person.