- Mon Jun 06, 2016 2:48 pm
#26203
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
Here, the stimulus relates an experiment dealing with amusia, which is a disorder that causes
people to have “difficulty telling different melodies apart and remembering simple tunes.” The
neuroscientists conducting the experiment created shifts in pitch for volunteers with amusia, who
were unable to distinguish the tones. However, when presented with timed sequences of musical
tones, those same volunteers were able to track the sequences and to discern slight changes in timing.
The question stem identifies this as a Must Be True question. Based on the experiment’s two results,
our prephrase is that amusia is not necessarily related to timing, since people with amusia where able
to track the timed sequences of tones.
Answer choice (A): We do not know that the volunteers had a heightened sense of timing. And, there
is no indication that the timing ability that they possess resulted in any way from their amusia.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it is consistent with the information
in the stimulus. The volunteers with amusia were able to track the timed sequences of tones, so it
appears that amusia is not relating to an ability to discern timing.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus told us that the volunteers were able to track slight differences in
timing, not differences in pitch.
Answer choice (D): We cannot say that the ability to tell melodies apart depends on the discernment
of pitch alone, because the stimulus did not address what is required to tell melodies apart. All we
know is that people with amusia have difficulty telling melodies apart.
Answer choice (E): There is no indication that the volunteers’ ability to perceive timing was a
learned skill. Nor do we know whether the ability to discern pitch is an innate skill.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
Here, the stimulus relates an experiment dealing with amusia, which is a disorder that causes
people to have “difficulty telling different melodies apart and remembering simple tunes.” The
neuroscientists conducting the experiment created shifts in pitch for volunteers with amusia, who
were unable to distinguish the tones. However, when presented with timed sequences of musical
tones, those same volunteers were able to track the sequences and to discern slight changes in timing.
The question stem identifies this as a Must Be True question. Based on the experiment’s two results,
our prephrase is that amusia is not necessarily related to timing, since people with amusia where able
to track the timed sequences of tones.
Answer choice (A): We do not know that the volunteers had a heightened sense of timing. And, there
is no indication that the timing ability that they possess resulted in any way from their amusia.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it is consistent with the information
in the stimulus. The volunteers with amusia were able to track the timed sequences of tones, so it
appears that amusia is not relating to an ability to discern timing.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus told us that the volunteers were able to track slight differences in
timing, not differences in pitch.
Answer choice (D): We cannot say that the ability to tell melodies apart depends on the discernment
of pitch alone, because the stimulus did not address what is required to tell melodies apart. All we
know is that people with amusia have difficulty telling melodies apart.
Answer choice (E): There is no indication that the volunteers’ ability to perceive timing was a
learned skill. Nor do we know whether the ability to discern pitch is an innate skill.