PrepTest 143
[lcid:3668] Prep Test 143 LSAT — Logical Reasoning — S1
Logical reasoning
Question prompt
Researchers compared the brains
Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: E
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Must Be True Questions
Answer choices
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ARoughly 35 percent of Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
Incorrect. Assuming the sample was representative, the stimulus supports the contention that 35% of people with schizophrenia will have abnormal brain subplates, not the other way around. The study would have had to have been on people with abnormal brain subplates (or all people, with that subgroup highlighted) to support this answer. -
BA promising treatment in Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
Incorrect. While damage to those connections might at least play a role in schizophrenia, there's no indication that the damage is repairable, so to call this treatment "promising" is out of scope. -
CSome people developed schizophrenia Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
Incorrect. While these two things are loosely correlated, there's no indication that one causes the other. -
DSchizophrenia is determined by Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
Incorrect. There's no indication that such damage is genetic, and there's no discussion of factors that could have led to schizophrenia in the other 65% of people, so this answer is unsupported. -
EThere may be a Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E matches the stem
Correct. Argument or Facts:
Facts
Question Type:
Must Be True
Stimulus Summary:
Sample Ð Recently deceased people, some with schizophrenia
Finding Ð 35% of those with schizophrenia had a certain type of brain damage; 0% of those without schizophrenia had it
Context Ð The brain damage occurred before birth and has to do with brain connections
Answer Anticipation:
It's hard to anticipate and answer for this stimulus as it's essentially just a biology lesson along with a weak correlation between a certain type of brain damage and schizophrenia. As such, we should head into the answer choices to find one that matches with the details, knowing that the statements are relatively weak and some trap answers are going to get us to assume a causal relationship based on that correlation.
Answer Explanation:
This answer is very weak, which is great because the stimulus is also weak, based on correlations, and only about a minority of people in the study. Damage to the subplate is loosely correlated with schizophrenia, so it's possible that it causes it. That damage also happens before birth. So it's possible there's a cause of schizophrenia that occurs before birth.
Key Takeaway:
Correlation doesn't prove causation, but it's evidence for it. If two things aren't correlated, then they're not causally related. Correlation suggests that a causal relationship might be present.
What this tests
Discussion
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June 2015 Practice Test - Question 20 2 replies
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