Reading comp PrepTest 148 · Section 2 · Question 22
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Science
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- A practice with problems is introduced and contrasted with another practice, and an assumption it rests on is stated
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Accepted practice - Using brain scans to see the structure of the brain (like X-rays)
- Practice with basic conceptual problems - Using brain scans to see mental activity/psychology
- Latter depends on a premise - (Modular Theory of Mind) Brain is broken into component parts that have different functions and work independently
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- The Author questions the premise/assumption, with expert backing
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Author - Might not be the case that the brain can be broken up like that
- Uttall - All mental processes function of general one spread throughout brain
- Example - Emotion and reason in different parts (Press), but you get angry for a reason
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- A challenge/question of Uttall’s critique, and a description of a process
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Challenge - Brain scans show parts of brain light up during tasks
- fMRI process - Subtraction - Measure brain activity baseline, measure activity during task, and subtract baseline from activity
- Author - “Seemingly plausible” reasoning - Subtraction shows just parts of brain related to task
Paragraph 4
- Paragraph note
- Problem with process (address challenge from beginning of Paragraph 3)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Scans give false impression - only shows parts of brain, but whole brain active
- Rhetorical question - Isn’t support for modular theory based on the clarity of these questionable scans? (Author doesn’t buy the theory)
Main Point: There are basic conceptual problems with using brain scans to show mental activity, as the premise/theory it’s based on (modular theory of mind) and the evidence used to back it up (subtractive fMRIs) both have issues.
Key Lines?Lines 1-3 - The Author kicks off the passage by bringing up issues with a practice
Lines 9-14 - A premise that a practice relies on is noted (in other words, an assumption)
Lines 15-17 - The Author questions the premise, with expert backing
Lines 24-27 - An example highlights the attack on that premise
Lines 29-31 - The Author raises how someone might respond to her critique
Paragraph 3 - A process is described (a bit confusingly…)
Lines 43-46 - The Author shows that she sees why this evidence is convincing, but she ultimately thinks it’s flawed (“seemingly” ahead of plausible suggests that it only seems plausible, it isn’t actually plausible)
Lines 47-52 - The Author shows why the evidence is ultimately problematic
Meta-Structure?NOT Problem/Solution - Note that the Author brings up conceptual problems with a certain tool, not problems that are meant to have solutions found for them. So there isn’t this common meta-structure present!
Assumption/Undermining - The Author brings up a premise that the opposing argument “depends on” (Lines 9-10) - in other words, an assumption. When an assumption is pointed out in an argument, you should expect someone to question it. Here, the Author and Uttall spend Paragraph 2 showing why that premise is questionable.
Example - In order to show why the premise that the opposing point (the use of brain scans to show mental activity) is questionable, the Author uses an example. The use of scans for that purpose relies on the assumption that the brain can be broken down into component parts that have a specified purpose (Lines 10-14). The Author uses the example of getting angry - while it’s commonly said that emotion and reason are handled by different parts of the brain, people generally get angry (an emotion) for a reason.
Counter a Critique - This shows up at the beginning of Paragraph 3, where the Author raises a question that suggests a critique of her view - if brain scans don’t accurately reflect mental activity, why do brain scans have only certain parts of the brain lit up? The rest of the paragraph describes how these brain scans work, but it’s confusing. We should take time to understand it - and a lot of it comes down to the overall description of fMRI - it’s the result of “subtraction” (Lines 33-34). To understand this, we need to know what is being subtracted from what. Here, it’s noted that a “baseline measurement” of brain activity during rest is subtracted from a measurement of the brain when doing an activity (Lines 41-43). So these scans aren’t showing brain activity - they’re showing additional brain activity, while the rest of the brain is still active but subtracted out of the image. And we can tell that the Author is going to point out a problem with this from the “seemingly plausible” reasoning behind it (Lines 43), as she wouldn’t say that it’s seemingly plausible if she bought it.
Last Thoughts?This is a super tough passage with 8 questions attached to it. Gear up for a challenge…
While this is a super confusing passage - especially Paragraph 3 - it’s important to focus on the basic elements that can help us make sense of it. For instance, the Author kicks off the entire passage by letting us know that she’s going to criticize the use of brain scans to picture mental activity by saying that there are “some basic conceptual problems” with it (Lines 1-3). Basic conceptual problems suggest that they’re pretty hard to overcome since they deal with the basic underlying concept.
Also, the Author points out an assumption of their use, and when the Author points out an assumption, she’ll usually undermine it. Here, the method “depends on a premise” (Lines 9-10) that “may in fact” not be true (Lines 15-17).
It gets a little fuzzy in Paragraph 3, which is where the Author starts by asking a question that challenges her view. However, since she started by noting the basic conceptual problems with using these images to see mental activity, it’s almost certain that she’s not going to abandon the critique and use Paragraph 3 to say that she was wrong all along. So we should be reading her description of fMRIs with an eye towards identifying a pivot back to talking about why they’re problematic for measuring brain activity - which we see when she calls the reasoning behind their use “seemingly plausible” (Line 43). Then, in Paragraph 4, she says that there’s an “immediately obvious” problem with the images - they obscure that the whole brain is active. That lines up with her and Uttal’s critique from Paragraph 2, bringing us back to the main point.
Even with all of this, though, we should expect to be in for a rough ride in these questions
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: D
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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ABecause the subtractive method Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) (Lines 3-6) While the opening paragraph doesn’t speak specifically about the subtractive method, it does say that brain scans are valid for medical diagnosis in Lines 3-6. And she doesn’t revisit medical applications in Paragraphs 3 or 4, so this answer is out of scope.
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BThe subtractive method results Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) (Lines 28-31) While the Author shows that there is an issue with the subtractive method that obscures how the entire brain is active even when just one section is lit up, the subtractive method itself results in images that show “well-defined areas that ‘light up’ in response to various cognitive tasks” (Lines 28-31). And she ends by saying that the subtractive method images illustrate the modular theory of the mind well - the theory that Uttal disagrees with.
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CBrain scans of individuals Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) (Lines 21-24) That the amygdala is the seat of emotions is what the popular press believes, and that view lines up with the modular theory of mind. While the Author does believe that this view is mistaken, it is backed up by subtractive images, which show just one part of the brain lit up during various mental activities because the activity of the rest of the brain is lit up. There’s no indication that the subtractive images say anything specific about the amygdala being the seat of emotion, but it’s implied that that belief was based on such images. This answer is either contradicted or out of scope, but either way, it’s wrong.
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DThe subtractive method seems Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D matches the stem
(D) (Lines 50-56) The Author ends the passage with a rhetorical question, suggesting that the striking images created by the subtractive method are what make the modular theory of mind so attractive. And these images create a “false impression of neat functional localization,” lining up with this answer’s “creates an illusion that brain functions are localized.” This answer restates most of the Author’s concluding argument about images created using the subtractive method, so it’s correct.
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EThe view that the Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) (Lines 37-38) When describing the subtractive method, the Author says that they actually depict the differential rate of oxygen use, so the view that that’s what it depicts isn’t based on a fundamental misconception. This answer is trying to confuse you by combining the technical language with the Author’s negative opinion of the subtractive method, but it does so in a manner that contradicts what the Author establishes about the facts of what the subtractive method shows.
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Discussion
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Whats wrong with B? 2 replies
Started by avif
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A E and D 1 reply
Started by tomgbean