Pilot Therapeutic Preparation Tool 60 items

Disclosure Statement Review and Polygraph Preparation Assessment

A pilot-stage therapeutic preparation tool for identifying areas of ambiguity, incompleteness, inconsistency, or clarification need before a focused polygraph examination.

The Centre for Forensic Neuroscience

0 / 60 answered

Use and Safeguarding Notice

Please read this policy carefully before starting. This tool reviews the clarity, completeness, stability, specificity, behavioural definition, temporal anchoring, and question-development suitability of a disclosure statement before a therapeutic polygraph examination.

It must not be used as a lie detector, credibility detector, proof, diagnosis, legal evidence, or confirmation of deception. It does not determine truthfulness, deception, guilt, credibility, or factual accuracy.

How to Complete This Questionnaire

Rate each item based on the disclosure statement and disclosure process currently under review. Select N/A when an item is not applicable or unknown. N/A counts as completed but does not contribute to the domain score denominator.

  • All scoring runs locally in this browser.
  • No responses are collected, stored, or transmitted.
  • Results describe clarification concern or statement preparation concern, not deception risk.

Response Scale

0 = No / not present
1 = Possibly or slightly present
2 = Clearly present
3 = Strongly present, repeated, or corroborated
N/A = Not applicable or unknown
Local only: responses stay on this page and are not transmitted.

Overall Preparation Outcome

Preparation Outcome
-

Domain-by-Domain Clarification Concerns

Assessment Report

Strong Disclaimer

This assessment does not determine truthfulness, deception, guilt, credibility, or factual accuracy. It evaluates reported features of a disclosure statement and disclosure process, including completeness, specificity, timeline clarity, narrative stability, operational testability, openness to clarification, contextual anchoring, and alternative explanations. Results should be interpreted cautiously and should not be used to accuse, pressure, threaten, shame, punish, or control another person.