Nay_Sayer
I say nay!
I picked 3; My code phrase was 3isthemagicnumber
I'll go back a few pages to find my guess.
I'll go back a few pages to find my guess.
If only Michel was the joking sort I could applaud his analysis as hilarious self-parody, but unfortunately he appears to have been entirely serious. It's hard to conceive of anyone writing anything so utterly delusional without intending it as a joke.
As soon as I read that the number was '10', I thought 'I bet '1' will be counted as a hit', and a few paragraphs later, it was indeed. Where's my million?
Besides, everyone knows the real answer was "473 G Yorkshire Terrier Teal Mist Cirrostratus".
I'm also slightly disturbed that he thinks I can hear his thoughts but decided to lie to him.
However, there was (in my opinion) a significant amount of low-quality evidence
He's not the first and won't be the last to have such delusional thoughts.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=112896
If you do a test where you simply ask the receiver “Did you hear my thoughts” and he says “No”, that proves nothing. Only when you have proved that his reply was totally devoid of dishonesty does it then become a valid answer.
I think it's necessary to take into account the fact that some subjects might lie, or might really not know the number, and the words that are said might give precious (and even perhaps indispensable) clues about that. Remember, this is a psychology experiment, and, in a psychology experiment, you better take psychological factors into consideration. If you all agree that one (numerical) answer definitely seems more credible than the other (without knowing the correct number that the researcher viewed, of course), this could therefore be of great interest, I think. If you (members of this forum) don't know the correct number, you can't be biased.Neither one. Selecting the answers you think are "higher quality" is introducing bias into the experiment.
Subjects in an experiment like this should only answer with a number 1 through 5, preferably in a manner that completely removes any interaction between the researcher and subject. For example, they press a button and the researcher only sees a number on a screen, as opposed to verbally reporting their answer to a researcher who might decide to ignore it out for some reason.
Now my question is: which (numerical) answer seems more credible to you? The first one (3), or the second one (2)? Note that I am not asking here which answer (in the sense of "set of words") is more credible, but, rather, which numerical answer is more credible, taking the words into account.
I think it's necessary to take into account the fact that some subjects might lie, or might really not know the number, and the words that are said might give precious (and even perhaps indispensable) clues about that. Remember, this is a psychology experiment, and, in a psychology experiment, you better take psychological factors into consideration. If you all agree that one (numerical) answer definitely seems more credible than the other (without knowing the correct number that the researcher viewed, of course), this could therefore be of great interest, I think. If you (members of this forum) don't know the correct number, you can't be biased.