Hi - this is a more general question on how to approach these open-ended Most strongly supported question types. I was able to rule out the other answer choices, based on the advice below:
"On a first pass through an open-ended "inferred / implies / suggests / most likely to agree", I'm looking to screen out unlikely answers on my first pass:
- extreme/specific wording
- wrong side of the scale / *****author's main point******
- unknown comparisons
- totally new, out of scope concepts"
I ended up picking (C) but was extremely unsure about it because it seemed to be talking about the subtraction method, which the author ultimately argued was misleading. And so while going thru the first round, I thought to myself, "hmmm, against author view point, likely to be wrong..."
For Q26, then, instead of having the author's viewpoint at the forefront of my mind, should I have just looked for something that was supported by the passage, regardless of which side of the scale it was on?????
Thank you!!!!!
ohthatpatrick Wrote:On a first pass through an open-ended "inferred / implies / suggests / most likely to agree", I'm looking to screen out unlikely answers on my first pass:
- extreme/specific wording
- wrong side of the scale / author's main point
- unknown comparisons
- totally new, out of scope concepts
A) "most" cognition? This also goes against the author by saying that the modular theory is MOSTLY correct.
B) "close to zero"? This goes against the author's main point: those parts of the brain ARE still active!
C) "most active" / "higher"? Sounds like the concept of the subtractive method, but I'd need to verify some wording.
D) "at ALL times"? That's an unlikely idea, and it's easy to look up where they defined the subtractive method and see that they never told us about any areas that are ALWAYS turned on.
E) Opposite of the passage. since the author COMPLAINED about the modular theory of the brain in the first paragraph by saying that anger SHOULD be localized in more than one place.
Meanwhile, brain scans are used to SUPPORT the modular theory.
So, (E) has a tool that's used to SUPPORT modular expressing an idea that would be used to OPPOSE modular.
Most importantly, we have no line reference(s) to support it, so we can't pick it.
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We would justify (C) with the wording in lines 37-43.
The concept of the subtractive method is that we get a baseline measurement for all the regions of the brain. Let's pretend that all five regions of the brain (A, B, C, D, E) have a baseline value of 50.
When we're thinking about music, ACD are still at 50, but BE are at 70 and 80.
The fMRI would show
A: 0 B: +20 C: 0 D: 0 E: +30
So what (C) is saying seems accurate:
The metabolic rate of BE is around +25, while the rate of the rest of the brain is 0.
Even in absolute terms, the rate of BE is around 75, while rest of the brain is at 50.