What Is the Central Nervous System?
The central nervous system (CNS) consists of the brain and spinal cord — the command centre of the entire nervous system. It processes all incoming sensory information, integrates that information with stored memories and learned associations, makes decisions, and sends outgoing commands to the body’s muscles and glands. In polygraph testing, the CNS is where the critical processing occurs that transforms a spoken question into the pattern of physiological responses the instrument records.
Role in the Polygraph Response
The entire chain of events during a polygraph examination flows through the CNS. Afferent (sensory) nerves carry the auditory stimulus (the question) to the brain. The brain’s cortical regions process the semantic meaning, the limbic system evaluates its emotional significance, and the hypothalamus coordinates the autonomic nervous system response. Efferent (motor) nerves then carry commands from the CNS to the target organs — sweat glands, heart, blood vessels, and respiratory muscles — producing the changes recorded on the chart.
CNS Structures Involved in Deception
Several CNS structures participate in the processing that underlies deception-related physiological responses. The prefrontal cortex is involved in the executive functions required for deception — suppressing the truth, constructing the lie, and monitoring the process. The amygdala and broader limbic system generate the emotional response to threat. The hypothalamus translates emotional activation into autonomic commands. The brain stem contains the control centres that execute cardiovascular and respiratory changes. These structures work in concert to produce the cognitive load and arousal patterns that differentiate deceptive from truthful responding.
CNS vs. Peripheral Nervous System
The CNS works in conjunction with the peripheral nervous system (PNS), which includes all the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord. The PNS is divided into the somatic nervous system (voluntary muscle control) and the autonomic nervous system (involuntary organ control). The polygraph primarily records the output of the autonomic division of the PNS, but these responses originate from processing within the CNS.
Impact on Testing
Conditions or substances that affect CNS function can influence polygraph results. Medications affecting the CNS (sedatives, stimulants, antidepressants, anxiolytics) may alter the processing chain between stimulus and response. Neurological conditions, traumatic brain injury, or intoxication may impair the CNS processing required for valid testing. The pre-test suitability assessment addresses these factors.