- Mon Sep 11, 2017 2:49 pm
#39577
Hi,
I chose (D), but didn't love it (and understand your reasons against it, all of which I did consider). But I don't quite understand (C).
My understanding of the subtraction method led me to think (C) was not possible. As far as I understood, the author was arguing that the problem with the subtraction method is that it leads us to incorrectly think that the normal levels of brain activity are zero, because the the method entails 1) measuring the baseline level of activity of all parts, and 2) then measuring the level of activity of all parts during a stimulus, and 3) subtracting 1 from 2 to find the effect of the stimulus.
So let's say that the brain has four areas, M, N, O, and P. The normal levels of activity in each are 25, 50, 30, and 20. When exposed to a stimulus, area P "lights up" and has an activity level of 40, twice its normal rate. Using the subtraction method, we'd see levels of 0, 0, 0, and 20. Thus, it looks like P is the center of all of the activity for the given stimulus, when in fact it's possible that some of those other normal activity levels are contributing to the mental activity.
I thought (C) was wrong because even though its lit-up-reading was 20, area N still had higher metabolic activity in absolute terms, absent the subtraction method. (I thought this would be a classic LSAT error! So I eliminated it even though I didn't love D, because I thought it was surely meant to look attractive while committing this very error.)
Perhaps your response will be, Answer choice (C) says only that "the areas of the brain that are most metabolically active show a rate of oxygen use that is higher than the rest of the brain," and even if I'm considering the absolute levels only, the area that is most metabolically active actually is area N, and that is still higher than P even when P is lit up, and thus is higher than the rest of the brain. And thus (C) is correct.
But if that's the case, why does answer (C) talk about activity specifically "during the performance of certain cognitive tasks"? The passage overwhelmingly led me to think that "certain cognitive tasks" would be the stimuli researchers were testing. But even if that's a wrong assumption, why do the baseline levels of cognition in every person's brain constitute "certain cognitive tasks"? Perhaps the brain is just passively, metabolically processing oxygen like every other organ in the body does, without conducting any cognitive tasks at all? (Those organs, needless to say, do not conduct cognitive tasks.)
Thanks!