Assume that for an ad campaign to be successful, at least 84% of those seeing a television commercial must be able to recall the name of the company featured in the commercial one hour after viewing the commercial. Before distributing an ad campaign nationally, an advertising company plans to show the commercial to a random sample of 18 people. It will also show the same people two additional commercials for different products or businesses. Complete parts a through c. a. Assuming that the advertisement will be successful (84% will be able to recall the name of the company in the ad), what is the expected number of people in the sample who will recall the company featured in the commercial one hour after viewing the three commercials? The expected number of people is. (Type an integer or a decimal. Do not round.) b. Suppose that in the sample of 18 people, 9 were able to recall the name of the company in the commercial one hour after viewing. Based on the premise that the advertising campaign will be successful, what is the probability of 9 or fewer people being able to recall the company name? The probability is. (Round to four decimal places as needed.) c. Based on the results of parts a and b, what conclusion might the advertising executives make about this particular advertising campaign? O A. The advertising campaign was a success because the percentage that remember the company's name appears to be greater than or equal to 84%. O B. The advertising campaign was a failure because the percentage that remember the company's name appears to be greater than or equal to 84%. O C. The advertising campaign was a success because the percentage that remember the company's name appears to be less than 84%. O D. The advertising campaign was a failure because the percentage that remember the company's name appears to be less than 84%