What Is Stimulus-Response Theory?
Stimulus-Response Theory is a physiological concept in polygraph science. The theoretical framework underlying polygraph testing which holds that specific stimuli (test questions) produce measurable physiological responses, and that the magnitude and pattern of these responses differ systematically between deceptive and truthful examinees. Deception-related stimuli are more salient to deceptive individuals, producing stronger ANS activation compared to comparison stimuli.
Physiological Basis and Measurement
Understanding the physiological mechanisms underlying polygraph testing is essential for examiners, researchers, and anyone evaluating polygraph evidence. The polygraph measures outputs of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) — involuntary physiological processes that respond to stress, threat perception, and cognitive load associated with deception.
When a deceptive examinee encounters a threatening relevant question, the brain’s threat detection system triggers the fight-or-flight response, producing measurable changes in electrodermal activity, cardiovascular function, respiration, and other autonomic outputs. These involuntary responses form the data that examiners and scoring algorithms analyse.
Implications for Polygraph Testing
This physiological concept has direct implications for polygraph examination practice, including suitability screening (assessing whether the examinee’s physiological condition supports valid testing), artifact identification (distinguishing genuine psychophysiological responses from noise), and the interpretation of scoring results.
Related Terms
Understanding Stimulus-Response Theory in context requires familiarity with several related polygraph concepts:
See also: Apnea, Arousal, Attention, Autonomic Nervous System, Adrenal Response, Amplitude.
Further Reading
For more information on polygraph terminology and the science of lie detection, explore the full Polygraph Glossary with over 250 defined terms. Visit the Polygraph Examiner Hub for professional resources, the research database for published polygraph studies, or learn how a polygraph works if you are preparing for an examination.
Key Takeaways
Stimulus-Response Theory is an important concept within the field of Psychophysiological Detection of Deception. Whether you are a polygraph examiner, student at an APA-accredited training programme, legal professional evaluating polygraph evidence, or a private individual preparing for a lie detector test, understanding this term and its relationship to other polygraph concepts will help you navigate the field with greater confidence and knowledge.
The science of polygraph testing has evolved significantly over more than 100 years, from the early work of William Moulton Marston and Leonarde Keeler to today’s digital instruments and validated scoring algorithms. Every term in this glossary represents a piece of that scientific and professional heritage. For a comprehensive overview, visit the Polygraph Examiner Hub or use our examiner selection guide to find a certified examiner near you.