Respiratory Hyperawareness in Polygraph Evaluations: A Psychophysiological Analysis and Critical Appraisal
https://doi.org/10.31749/2380-0550-EP2026-1-04
Abstract
Breathing is a unique bodily function controlled both automatically by the brainstem and voluntarily
by conscious thought. When individuals become overly aware of their breathing—a phenomenon
called respiratory hyperawareness—this dual control system becomes disrupted, leading
to irregular breathing patterns. This paper examines how respiratory hyperawareness affects
polygraph testing accuracy and proposes evidence-based solutions to minimize measurement
contamination.
During polygraph evaluations, examiners often mention breathing mechanics or instruct examinees
to “breathe normally.” However, these well-intentioned instructions paradoxically
trigger hyperawareness, causing examinees to consciously monitor an otherwise automatic process.
This conscious attention activates brain regions responsible for processing internal bodily
sensations, particularly the insular cortex, and creates competition between voluntary cortical
control and automatic brainstem regulation. The resulting breathing irregularities—changes in
rhythm, depth, and rate—cascade into cardiovascular responses that polygraph instruments record as potential indicators of deception, even when no deception exists.
Drawing on established theories including ironic process theory and interoceptive processing frameworks, this analysis reveals how attentional focus on breathing amplifies bodily sensations and anxiety, particularly in individuals already prone to heightened internal awareness. The paper critically evaluates current polygraph practices, identifying significant gaps in empirical validation and standardized measurement protocols.
To address these limitations, this work recommends adopting the orienting reflex framework, implementing objective respiratory line excursion or line length measurements available through modern instrumentation, and utilizing a “silent answer test” baseline protocol with nonsensical questions. These evidence-based modifications can establish uncontaminated physiological baselines and improve credibility assessment accuracy. Ultimately, advancing polygraph methodology requires moving beyond traditional training dogma toward scientifically validated, standardized practices grounded in psychophysiological research.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Vol. 20 No. 1 (2026)
Published: 30-06-2026

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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