 My name is Don Crepo. I'm currently Director of Eye Detect Services with the Capital Center for Credibility Assessment, C3A. Also a member of the Converis Technical Advisory Board for Eye Detect. I have three years of federal service, all of it in the Credibility Assessment Arena, primarily in the area of polygraph but more recently in other technologies as well. Let me offer a comment regarding the relative accuracy of both eye detect and the polygraph. The polygraph in the screening mode has been shown to have an accuracy perhaps in the area of 80%, maybe up as high as 85%. Really depending on certain factors such as how many relevant questions are covered and the competency of the examiner. The eye detect technology has honed in on an accuracy of about 86% in screening and has no inconclusives and it doesn't vary as to who the proctor of the examination is. There's also the matter of who the source of the research is. In polygraphy, most of the first quality research we have comes out of the University of Utah by the same group of scientists who have validated eye detect technology. And so we can have great confidence that they've given the same level of care in their polygraph research as they have with their eye detect research. It's also interesting that the very same scientists that develop the computerized polygraph and is responsible for most of the really good research in the field of polygraphy are the very same scientists who are to be given credit for the development of the eye detect technology and the testing protocol. We have demonstrated the eye detect technology in front of dozens of U.S. government agencies. The way we typically do it is to conduct a numbers test where the examinee, if you will, selects a number, writes it down on a piece of paper, doesn't show it to anyone. We test with the eye detect system and in the scores of tests that we have conducted for government agencies to demonstrate it, the eye detect technology has always gotten the number correct. As a result, we have some very surprised individuals who may have been skeptical originally about the technology have become believers in the system.