Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
The 571 trials agrees with the first paragraph under "Discussion" in the first paper cited:
Ah, hold on a minute. To repeat from the book:
Juninho mentioned caller ID. Interesting.
~~ Paul
Yet clearly the paper says they picked up the phone before guessing, while the book says the opposite.Combining the results of all our experiments, and adding in the trials conducted by Sam Bloomfield, there were 63 participants altogether. They made 231 correct guesses in 571 trials, a success rate of 40%, well above the mean chance expectation of 25% (Table 8). The 95% confidence limits of this result are from 36% to 45%. This effect was robust and repeatable and was hugely significant statistically (p = 4 x 10-16). Not all participants scored at levels above chance, but the great majority did so.
Ah, hold on a minute. To repeat from the book:
It doesn't say when they wrote down their guesses, so we don't know if they really guessed after they picked up the phone.At a prearranged time, the subject received a call from one of these four people. Before answering the phone he or she had to guess who was calling. In trials that were not videotaped, the caller answered the phone by saying "hello, [name]" before the other person had spoken.
Juninho mentioned caller ID. Interesting.
~~ Paul