Reading comp PrepTest 117 · Section 1 · Question 17

Passage

Questions 15-20  .        The survival of nerve cells, as well as their  . performance of some specialized functions, is Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Science


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Science and a discovery
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Science - “Neurotrophic” factors required by nerve cells (survival, function)
    • Discovery - Rita Levi-Montalcini (RLM) - 1950s - Discovered first (NGF) - Nobel Prize (1986)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Process of discovery (series of experiments; starting in ‘40s)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Study/Hypo 1 - Nerve cells in embryo programmed to die - RLM counted nerve cells to confirm
    • Study 2 - Mouse tumors grew nerve cells in chick embryos
    • Study 3 - New process (tissue culture) - Mouse tumors caused chick nerve cells to grow around them
    • Further research - Identified specific protein - “nerve growth factor” (NGF)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Further research/science (how it works)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • NGF first of many cell-growth factors
    • Present in many tissues
    • Serves two purposes - Direct developing nerves to their targets; keep them alive (cells die if NGF goes away or anti-NGF)

Main Point: RLM’s discovery of nerve growth factor (NGF) and it’s role in developing nerve cells and keeping them alive was a “crucial development in the history of biochemistry” (Line 8).

Key Lines?

Lines 5-10 - An important discovery is noted

Lines 40-41 - Discovery is shown to be first of many in area

Lines 51-55 - Two key functions of discovery

Meta-Structure?

Important New Discovery - While many passages discuss a new theory that supplants an old one, this one focuses on a discovery that didn’t replace some old theory. Paragraph 1 features a discussion of the “crucial development in the history of biochemistry” by Rita Levi-Montalcini. This suggests the passage is going to explore this new discovery, and the Author’s opinion of it will serve as the main point. Since Paragraph 2 explains how the discovery was made and Paragraph 3 discusses some of the implications of it, we can confirm that that is the focus of the passage. Therefore, the Author’s opinion of the discovery and its importance is the main point of the passage, as we noted above (and it’s essentially just a restatement of Lines 5-10).

List (of Studies) - Studies are important on the LSAT, and so are lists. Paragraph 2 here serves as a list of studies that RLM performed in order to reach her important discovery. It’s a very extensive paragraph, so we should expect some questions on these studies.

Last Thoughts?

There’s a lot of science in this passage, which can make it easy to get lost in what’s going on. However, focus on important elements of logic, not of science. For instance, we don’t need to know all the details of the studies, just the broad strokes of them - we can always go back to find the answer to a question as long as we can identify which study it’s asking about. Same with the functions of NGF - we don’t need to understand what “neurotrophic” means, just that it involves directing nerve cells and allowing them to survive.

Question prompt

The primary function of Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: C

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Science

Strategy Overview

Review our role notes for Paragraphs 2 and 3, then find an answer reflecting their relationship

Answer Anticipation

These questions asking for the function of a paragraph should be welcome - after all, we should be taking a couple seconds after reading a paragraph to note its function in the Author’s overall argument!With that said, this one is a little weird in that it’s asking about the relationship of purpose between two paragraphs. However, since we’re defining the role of each paragraph in the overall argument being made, each subsequent paragraph should take the role(s) of earlier paragraph(s) into account.So what did we say for Paragraphs 2 and 3?Paragraph 2 - Process of discovery (series of experiments; starting in ‘40s)Paragraph 3 - Further research/science (how it works)So Paragraph 3 shows that there was follow-up research from Paragraph 2 (Lines 41-42), and it highlights the conclusions drawn by that research as to the function of NGF (Lines 51-55). Let’s find an answer reflecting that purpose.

Answer choices

  1. A
    indicate that conclusions referred Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) (Lines 41-45) While Paragraph 3 does describe further research, that research builds off of the research in Paragraph 2, it doesn’t verify it. And, in any case, this answer states that the purpose of Paragraph 3 is to suggest that verification is needed, whereas it actually presents the results of the experiments that built off of it. For this answer to be correct, Paragraph 3 would itself have to raise the question of whether the research required verification.

  2. B
    indicate that conclusions referred Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) (Lines 41-45) The research noted in Paragraph 3 builds off of the research from Paragraph 2, further diving into how NGF works to regulate nerve growth.

  3. C
    indicate ways in which Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C matches the stem

    (C) (Lines 40-45) Paragraph 3 describes “subsequent research” that confirmed RLM’s findings and built off of them to lead to new discoveries about how NGF works. This answer is therefore correct.

  4. D
    describe subsequent discoveries of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) (Lines 40-41; Line 51; Line 57) The Paragraph does start by discussing NGF as the “first of many” similar substances discovered. However, Paragraph 3 doesn’t discuss these other substances - in fact, it dives into more information on NGF, so this answer is incorrect.

  5. E
    indicate that experimental procedures Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) (Line 42) The passage references “subsequent research,” but it doesn’t go into details about the research techniques - that’s limited to Paragraph 2. So this answer is incorrect.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 4%
  2. B 2%
  3. C Credited 73%
  4. D 17%
  5. E 4%

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Discussion

  • Help 1 reply

    Started by AddisonPatton

  • Anomalous in Passage B 1 reply

    Started by Hannah-Anderson

  • E over D 1 reply

    Started by Meredith