A moderate success would be a hit rate which just exceeded the level needed to be statistically significant. Your test does not remotely qualify.
In analyzing my telepathy tests, I usually do not limit myself to just counting the total number of answers, counting those which are correct and then calculating the ratio and the p-value. For example, to me there is a difference between the proven correct answers:
... I do indeed have ESP, and know for a fact that he wrote 2!
or
I am seeing a 4 very clearly. It's almost as though I had written it myself.
(regardless of what may be said later by one of the members, highlighting by me), and an unpleasant but hypothetical:
This is a ridiculous test. Nevertheless, I say 2
.
In the case of the Yahoo test now under consideration, we note that John (who gave the correct answer) has a best answer rate of 22% for 12,395 answers, with a "scientific" DNA avatar (
https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20191223165542AAdfnoP) while the person who gave an incorrect answer has a best answer rate equal to "only" 7% for 263 answers, with an avatar featuring a big sword. In addition, John had already participated in one of my tests, in which he gave the correct answer ("B"), and later said:
Yeah, I knew it was B all along
. Satyrette, on the other hand, had participated in just one test, I think, in which she gave an
incorrect answer. So the picture seems rather clear, credibility-wise.
As a former researcher (I think), you must certainly understand that
all aspects of evidence available to you must be taken into account, not just the purely numerical one. John said, in the latest test:
I am now a proven psychic!
This has a certain meaning, which cannot just be ignored (especially for such a good member of Yahoo), just because it is not numerical.
My mother told me in 1991 (after seeing her very old father) "There is something I must tell you, people can read your mind". Obviously, I didn't reply "Sorry, mother, where is your p-value. Without a p-value, this doesn't count".