A researcher says that there is an 80% chance a polygraph test (lie detector test) will catch a person who is, in fact, lying. Furthermore, there is approximately a 9% chance that the polygraph will falsely accuse someone of lying. (a) If the polygraph indicated that 30% of the questions were answered with lies, what would you estimate for the actual percentage of lies in the answers? Hint: Let B = event detector indicates a lie. We are given P(B) = 0.3. Let A = event person is lying, so Ac = event person is not lying. Then P(B) = P(A and B) + P(Ac and B) P(B) = P(A)P(B | A) + P(Ac)P(B | Ac) Replacing P(Ac) by 1 - P(A) gives P(B) = P(A) · P(B | A) + [1 - P(A)] · P(B | Ac) Substitute known values for P(B), P(B | A), and P(B | Ac) into the last equation and solve for P(A). (Round your answer to two decimal places.) a.) P(A) = (b) If the polygraph indicated that 70% of the questions were answered with lies, what would you estimate for the actual percentage of lies? (Round your answer to one decimal place.)