- Thu May 13, 2021 11:42 pm
#87079
I got this question correct, but the approach to MBT questions really had me over thinking this. If we are only applying what's in the stimulus to what a correct answer can be, (B) is a leap and requires an assumption. In order for (B) to be correct you have to assume that diverting one's attention leads to a detraction of driver performance. I know the whole idea with MBT questions is to make an inference based off info in the stimulus, but to me you have to bring in information outside of the stimulus: a lack of attention will lead to worse driving ability. While I think this is true in the real world, I don't understand how you can make that leap from the stimulus alone. There is nothing in the stimulus that indicates a lack of attention will lead to a decline in ability at anything, just that you are not completely focused. Does this fall under the "most strongly support"/"plausible assumption based on common sense standards" category?
Ultimately, I chose (B) because it was the best answer(and many questions have answers that aren't great), but I'm curious if there is something wrong with my process here or if I'm overthinking it.