 It's a lot easier to make your body react artificially than to keep your body from reacting artificially. For us to fake a lack of reaction is next to impossible. Hi, I'm Craig Avery with the Denver Business Journal. I'm here in Centennial at Accountability Polygraph Services. It's got a new technology I detect that measures I responses to detect truthfulness. And I'm about to see if I can beat it and win $20. I'm gonna have you write down a number on this notepad here between, and I don't wanna see it, so I'm gonna kinda look away at the time, so I don't want you to do it just yet, but you're gonna write a number between two and nine. It can be two and it can be nine. And I want you to fold it up and put it in a pocket, hide it somewhere where I can't see it, but I'm gonna have you answer a number of questions. It's about a 10 minute test with the mouse here. And it's gonna ask you, some of these questions can be a little bit confusing. It's gonna say things like, I chose the number one. Number two is not the number I wrote. What you're gonna do when you're answering these questions is you're gonna tell me the truth on every single question, except for your number. Whatever the number you select, I want you to lie on. The catch to this test is if you beat the test and it has been done, you get 20 bucks. It's a proprietary infrared camera basically on the bottom of a surface tablet that can be used to help detect truthfulness or deception. A big piece of what we envision using this in is pre-employment screening or possibly ongoing investigations as well. As compared to traditional polygraph testing, the eye detect is less invasive, first and foremost. But you got the instrumentation, the tubes around the chest, you've got a blood pressure cuff on some stuff strapped to your fingertips. You're holding still, facing forward while you're being asked very personal questions by an examiner. With eye detect, you're not talking to me at all. You have your chin in the chin rest. You're staring at a computer screen and you're using a mouse to answer true, false questions. What the eye detect watches for is 16 different elements of change within the eyes. Pupil dilation, response time, blink rate, focus, things of that nature. The number that the scoring software is saying you select was the number four. I'd love to see what you wrote down. Am I gonna be $20 for a shirt? No, number four, but you can see there the highest reactivity on that chart is the number four. Because you feel as you know your lie is coming up, subconsciously it doesn't build up to it. And as soon as you're done lying, there's a drop off and you see the steep drop off after four. Answer number four twice, which tells me in the polygraph examiner you don't like lying.