 drive from Fox 31 Denver. This is Good Day Colorado. I pulled you over. Depends on how long you were following me. Why don't we just take it from the top? Here it goes. I sped. I followed too closely. I ran a stop sign. I almost hit a Chevy. I sped some more. I failed to yield at a crosswalk. I changed lanes in the intersection. I changed lanes without signaling while running a red light. Is that all? No, he's got unpaid parking tickets in his club box. You know this movie. I told you. Unfortunately, it isn't usually this easy for police to get the whole story when they stop someone on the road. But now law enforcement has a new tool in an effort to get the truth. It's new lie detection technology called I Detect. Denver based accountability polygraph services first company in Colorado and one of the first in the country to use this new technology. So we decided to try it out on this guy. Yeah. Hey, here comes JP. Come on in, he's the one that gave you the test. So before we get to you, JP, thank you for grilling Ken, by the way. How did it go? I'm the father. We have the result. You are not the father. JP, good to have you. I'm Kirk, by the way. Thank you. That's true. That's not a lie. So the process, it uses your eyes. How does it work? What happens with this test that they had to check test. A normal test takes about 30 minutes. The shortened version that Ken took is about a 10 minute test. But over that 30 minutes, the test will measure take about 90,000 different pictures of your eyes using a high sensitivity of infrared infrared camera that monitors 16 different elements of change within the eyes. Things like pupil dilation, blink rate, response time, eye fixation, things of that nature. It's true that the eyes don't lie, huh? This is true. That's absolutely true. And you walked in literally from getting the results. How did he do? Because he tried to lie, right? Oh, well, that was the way this test was set up, as we had Ken write down a number between one and 10. And while asked questions about one and 10, tell the truth on the other questions and lie about his question. Got it. And some of the test questions on this particular test, to add a little bit more focus, can be a little bit confusing. And Ken, you did mix up a couple of the answers. Of course. I'm like, which part was I supposed to lie about? And that's fine. You can't lie about confusion. That's just very true. I nailed that one. Were you guys able to tell, though? Which ones he was lying about? I have not seen what number Ken wrote down at this point. But the number that the eye detect system found that you had written down was the number six. That is that is true. Now, to be totally honest, I did leave that number sitting out on the table. I was like, okay, but I did. I wrote down number six. So there you go. Was able to figure out exactly what I was lying because we can't control how our pupils react. I mean, exactly. Exactly. That's an involuntary thing that no matter how hard we try, we can't we can't absolutely. So but it's not perfect either. I mean, we know lie detectors aren't perfect. And this isn't 100% perfect. No, the eye tech technology. Most recent study came out literally last week shows the eye detect in a screening process to 86% accurate. How does that compare to, you know, getting hooked up with 15 million wires, the typical classic polygraph. Well, by trade, I am a polygraph examiner. And in screening tests, it's right about the same thing. Okay, one of the benefits of the eye detect is it's faster and cheaper than traditional polygraph. A traditional polygraph, I can run for a day. Yeah, theoretically, I could run about 30 eye detects in a day. So if we're screening a large pool of candidates for, say a police or fire hire or a screening for security officers or things of that nature, does this does this technology allow it to be used in court cases and legal cases? Does it approach that level? We're getting there. Now one of the benefits to eye detect is there are seven peer reviewed studies showing the accuracy of this test. One of the struggles we've had with polygraph in the past is with the numerous different types of polygraph tests that could be run. There's only one polygraph testing technique that comes close to that level of peer reviewed data. So it's a lot easier to understand up in a courtroom and say, here's the studies backing up what we're doing. Here's the results we found. Well, that's the thing with polygraph is that it's not always admissible in court. Is this going to be different or kind of the same? We're hoping it's going to be different because of that research that you talked about. Absolutely. Now the inventors of the eye detect technology are actually the same team that invented the computerized polygraph back in 1992. And this technology has been worked on since about 2002. And it's just coming to the States now it's been used extensively overseas and in Mexico for screening process things of that nature. Now, Kierke and I are parents. Can parents get a hold of technology? They got a cute little chin rest for kids. You know, you set them down at the table. We're gonna find out. All I gotta do is threaten video games and I get the truth at the time. You get it? You know what I'm saying? Is this one of the drawbacks to the eye detect is it's not totally customizable like that. We have 500 different preset structures on it that we can use for preemployment screening for certain types of criminal specific cases things of that nature. One of the benefits to polygraph testing traditional polygraph testing is we can customize a test on a spot on the spot which we're not able to with the eye detect. So there's pluses and minuses to the different technologies out there. So kids are safe. We just have to use our spidey. Well, thank you for coming in and talking about this. It's really cool and it's like it's happening right here in Colorado. You didn't give me the proper reaction for the father results like they do on the show. What you want to point at the like you can see. You are not the father. I told you. We got cheers. Everybody accepted the fact that was thank you so much. Thank you so much. I appreciate you in here. Thank you. You failed. We'll be right back.