Anderson also endorsed former Australian skipper Steve Waugh's idea that players should take lie-detector test but felt making it voluntary would not serve the purpose.
"I'm with Andrew Strauss in that I would be happy to take one, but one thing worries me: if you believe the test is going to produce conclusive evidence why make it voluntary?
Surely people who are innocent will volunteer and people who aren't, won't," he said.
Anderson considers the current four-Test series against India as the biggest assignment after 2009 Ashes and said England will look not to repeat the same mistakes, which they committed two summers ago.
"We take the idea of becoming the best team in world cricket very seriously. We've tried not to get ahead of ourselves, but we've never made any secret that is our aim, and that we think we are capable of achieving it.
"India are No 1 and are a great side. This has to be the biggest thing here since the 2009 Ashes ... we will be making sure of is that we don't repeat what we did then if the case arises," he said.
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