- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26980
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus presents yet another experiment from which the author draws a causal conclusion. A diverse group of six-month-olds listened to various musical intervals, and showed more interest in the intervals which are prevalent in the musical systems of most world cultures. The author concludes that this is based on a biological disposition:
Answer choice (A) does not strengthen the causal claim. The fact that the apparent preference for such intervals continues beyond childhood provides no insight into the initial cause for that preference. Answer choice (C) seems to weaken the author’s claim; if the babies were exposed to a lot of music, most of which reflected the most prevent musical intervals, then this provides an alternative cause (that is, familiarity) for the babies’ preference. Answer choice (D) is perhaps the most clearly irrelevant, since the whole discussion here centers around musical preferences, not color. Answer choice (E), like answer choice (C) above, provides an alternative cause for the babies’ general preferences—repetition/familiarity.
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus presents yet another experiment from which the author draws a causal conclusion. A diverse group of six-month-olds listened to various musical intervals, and showed more interest in the intervals which are prevalent in the musical systems of most world cultures. The author concludes that this is based on a biological disposition:
- Cause Effect
Biology Interest is more prevalent musical intervals
Answer choice (A) does not strengthen the causal claim. The fact that the apparent preference for such intervals continues beyond childhood provides no insight into the initial cause for that preference. Answer choice (C) seems to weaken the author’s claim; if the babies were exposed to a lot of music, most of which reflected the most prevent musical intervals, then this provides an alternative cause (that is, familiarity) for the babies’ preference. Answer choice (D) is perhaps the most clearly irrelevant, since the whole discussion here centers around musical preferences, not color. Answer choice (E), like answer choice (C) above, provides an alternative cause for the babies’ general preferences—repetition/familiarity.