Your data is based on your opinion regarding someone being sincere or not with their answer.
How is that science?
Let's try to keep it simple.
When I see Loss Leader's answer:
I am seeing a 4 very clearly. It's almost as though I had written it myself.
, I say "no problem", because I believe (based on testimonies and other elements) that telepathy is probably real and that I am probably a strong telepathic sender.
Kid Eager answered, in the same test:
It's becoming clear now.
I see a chariot. No, sorry - it's oregano....
Running around the oregano I see figures. They're small and have orange hair. Could be the number 6 coated in felt, but it's hard to be sure.
All this is happening on the surface of a king-sized bed, floating in a sea of banana custard.
You are therefore thinking of the number 1.
(
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=9445222#post9445222).
Here Kid Eager claims that, because he sees a king-sized bed floating in a sea of banana custard and some other stuff, I thought number 1 in my test.
This is not a rational and reasonable argument, even by assuming that telepathy does exist.
So I declared Kid Eager's answer non-credible.
These are simple and reasonable opinions in an ESP research, so they are scientific.
Now, my interesting and new discovery is that, if and only if I limit my statistical analysis to the subset of credible answers (credibility being evaluated by using fairly obvious arguments that most reasonable people can understand, and not just me), then I tend to find statistically significant results in my telepathy experiment (good hit rate and p-value).
But I still cannot say in a totally sure way whether an individual answerer used telepathy or just random guessed, I can only speculate on that.
Sometimes, in my test, I find credible answers that are actually incorrect. If I was just cheating by "deciding" that all incorrect answers are not credible, I would never find answers that are both credible and incorrect.
Why does your test have to have boundary parameters as to what your test subjects should be focusing on? If someone was truly receptive to your thought projection, you would be able to concentrate on anything and see if your test subjects got that particular projected thought. Any number, object, etc., would suffice, without telling them anything.
Doing a successful telepathy test is difficult, there are some conditions which must be met. One of these is that the test should preferably not be too difficult, otherwise people won't cooperate. This is why I limit, in my tests, the number of possible correct answers. But this doesn't of course mean that my apparent telepathic property can only transmit numbers in the range 1-4.
Of interest (from another forum):
Terra Tourist said:
Hey! I got it right. Thanks Michel H for this little experiment. It's funny what you said about guessing the number 1. It's a number I would also typically avoid. But this time, I believe I did see you writing it on a page, so that's why I went with it, despite my knee-jerk reluctance.
Thanks again.
(
http://www.spiritualforums.com/vb/showpost.php?p=1423682&postcount=23 )