(See) ESP A student majoring in psychology designs an experiment to test for extrasensory perception (ESP). In this experiment, a card is randomly selected
Question: ESP A student majoring in psychology designs an experiment to test for extrasensory perception (ESP). In this experiment, a card is randomly selected from a shuffled deck, and the blindfolded subject must guess the suit (clubs, diamonds, hearts; spades) of the card selected. The experiment is repeated 25 times, with the card replaced and the deck reshuffled each time.
- For subjects who make random guesses with no ESP, find the mean number of correct responses.
- For subjects who make random guesses with no ESP, find the standard deviation for the numbers of correct responses.
- For subjects who make random guesses with no ESP, find the probability of getting more than 12 correct responses.
- If a subject gets more than 12 correct responses, test the claim that they made random guesses. Use a 0.05 significance level.
- You want to conduct a survey to estimate the percentage of adult Americans who believe that some people have ESP. How many people must you survey if you want \(90 \%\) confidence that your sample percentage is in error by no more than four percentage points?
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