 case at 12. Good morning. San Antonio starts right now. Good morning. It's Wednesday, April 3rd. Thank you so much for being with us this morning, everybody. All right. So there's a new technology to make lie detecting more accurate. It follows eye movement and Tiffany we're just gonna look at it. It's this week's tech essay coming up after the break. It's being called a new type of lie detector test. Bond enforcement able to use new technology to see if suspects are indeed telling the truth. And this week's tech essay report. Tiffany Werta shows us how this new tool works. Here in Texas, um, we we have used it with law enforcement in an Internet crimes against Children's sting operation. This is I detect. We have some countries that are using this for testing individuals that may have had a scenario where drugs are found, for example, in their in their luggage. CEO and president of Converis, Todd Mickelson says the company started by professors at the University of Utah, who spent 40 years in the field of lie detection. This bar that you see down here is the infrared high definition camera that's going to capture up to 60 unique measurements per second. I took the test to see how it works in the more truthful you appear, the less likely your life will be detected right down a number between two and nine. After calibrating my eyes, a series of statements show on the screen. I have to respond today. I picked seven as the number and the eye tracker is capturing hundreds of thousands of these unique measurements that are occurring in your eyes. And that information goes into a computer algorithm at the conclusion of the test to generate a score. We believe that the numbers three I detect was right numbers three. The company recently showcase their product at this year's border security Expo. We have outside the United States some other countries. Fortunately, I can't mention who they are, but other countries that are using it specifically for that purpose to confirm if a suspected terrorist, for example, is in fact a terrorist or to confirm if someone's lying about the reason for which they're entering the country. Mickelson says in an ever changing environment of technology, this tool is one they can depend on. Tiffany What has case at 12 news. That is fascinating. Isn't it? Oh, Mickelson says they spent 13 years in research and development doing field studies and lab studies. Reminds me of that Tom Cruise movie minority report where they're trying to pre crime unit. They're trying to catch people before they committed certain crimes. One of the guys who go and arrest them before they committed the crime. And then he ends up being accused of a crime. Yes, he hadn't committed yet. Kind of interesting, a Steven Spielberg film if you'd never caught it. Yeah, it's good.