Michel H, here is precisely why your analysis and credibility ratings are (* not convincing).
From your first "test":
<snippage>
Jodie's answer:
(click on the first little red arrow to go to the post, to see her avatar).
This answer is very minimal. The total absence of any comment might indicate something to hide, or a small level of aggressivity. I find the expression on her face (if it's a photo of her) slightly aggressive, CR=-1.
And from your latest "test":
<snippage>
11)
This (correct) answer is very brief, but I said in my opening post:
CR=5, QR=80.
So if an answer is brief but wrong, there is "something to hide". If it is brief but correct, it gets a pass. The fact that the same type of answer can get wildly different credibility ratings just goes to prove that you will say anything to justify the hits, and anything to discredit the misses.
... .
Hokulele, please be polite in your posts on this forum.
You have quoted me in an incomplete way.
I did not just say (in the analysis for the second test):
...
11)
This (correct) answer is very brief, but I said in my opening post:
CR=5, QR=80.
What I really said was:
...
11)
This (correct) answer is very brief, but I said in my opening post:
...
A comment might be useful, but is not indispensable.
...
CR=5, QR=80.
The important sentence I wrote: "A comment might be useful, but
is not indispensable." has unfortunately been omitted in your quote from my analysis.
The main reason why I gave a clearly positive credibility (CR=5) to gabeygoat, after having given a slightly negative credibility to Jodie in the first test (CR=-1, negative, but close the the positive credibility zone ]0,10] ) was the fact that my initial question, my opening post
was different in the second test, and I view the change I made in the initial post as
important.
The opening post of the first test was:
Hi, I invite you to participate in a simple telepathy test.
At about 16:39 on this Thursday August 9 (Brussels, Belgium time),
...
A comment might also be useful.
Thank you for participating.
...
Then, Jodie answered:
, and I said in the analysis, about this answer :
...
This answer is very minimal. The total absence of any comment might indicate something to hide, or a small level of aggressivity. I find the expression on her face (if it's a photo of her) slightly aggressive, CR=-1.
...
In this first test, I had received 13 valid numerical answers, and she was the
only answerer who had not written the slightest little comment, or the slightest little text I could use to try to assess her credibility, when I did the analysis, even though I had said "A comment might also be useful." in the initial post.
In the beginning of the second test, I said:
Hi, I would like to invite you to participate in a (new) simple telepathy test.
...
A comment might be useful, but is not indispensable.
...
So, I replaced the sentence "A comment might also be useful." by "A comment might be useful, but is not indispensable.", in the initial, opening post of the second test. I did this because, about four months before, I had done another test, on another forum, where I noticed that all (numerically) correct and credible answers were very brief, with (almost) no text or comment, while answers with longer comments were either incorrect, or (in one case) correct but not credible. So, I felt that these brief answers were important, and that, while comments were very useful, I should also try to get across the message that very brief answers were acceptable too.
Then, in this second test, gabeygoat answered:
and I said, in the analysis (about this answer):
...
This (correct) answer is very brief, but I said in my opening post:
...
A comment might be useful, but is not indispensable.
...
CR=5, QR=80.
...
, as mentioned above.
The higher credibility CR=+5 was consistent with my message "short answers are ok in this second test".
Obviously, two identical answers can get different credibility ratings in tests 1 and 2, if the opening post of test 1 is (significantly) different from the opening post of test 2.
Note: it may be of interest to try to go a little further in the analysis, and to compare to each other, for exemple, all three "very brief" answers (answers consisting of just the number "guessed", with no accompanying text, either in the post where the numeric guess is given, or later in the thread, but before my analysis) which were given in the two tests I have done so far in this forum.
Jodie answered (incorrectly), in the first test:
In the second test, gabeygoat answered (correctly):
while DuvalHMFIC responded (correctly also):
When I wrote and circled my numbers to "telepathically guess" on my sheet of paper, I wrote them in "digit form" ("2", or "4" in the cases of these two tests), not in "word form" ("two" or "four"), as was suggested by my two initial posts, and, interestingly, the two correct answerers also responded in digit form, the form I used myself, but not Jodie, who was incorrect. In addition, both correct answerers ended their responses with a
full stop/period (this may reflect a desire to be careful in the answer), but not "incorrect" Jodie (even though her answer was a little longer). This modest additional analysis seems therefore to confirm, once again, the validity of the "credibility" approach adopted here. It also does suggest that answerers responded in a careful (and, perhaps, carefully calculated) way ("in a certain sense"), there may have be a conscious desire by many to give a "clue", to alert about the incorrectness of their answers, so that their answers become more "morally acceptable" to them.