- Thu Jan 31, 2013 8:35 pm
#7489
Hey rima,
Thanks for the question. This is a tricky game for a lot of people, so you're certainly not alone. Fortunately Pattern games like this don't appear all that often, so you probably won't see one on the test (although, no guarantees!), and if you do they tend to behave pretty predictably, as this one does.
As the exaplanation notes, the key to this game is recognizing that the combinations of flasks can only happen in a limited number of ways: 6 options if only one mixing occurs, and 3 options if two mixings occur. I won't type all of these out since they're really well described in the answer key, but they're essentially the product of combinations, where you can only make 6 unique groups combining only two of the four flasks (1+2 3 4, 1+3 2 4, 1+4 2 3, 2+3 1 4, etc), and 3 unique groups combining all four flasks in groups of two (1+2 3+4, 1+3 2+4, 1+4 2+3).
Once you see that it's easy to determine what the resultant colors of each mixing combination would be by just following the rules--for instance, for the 1+2 3 4 scenario, 1+2 gives red, 3 is green (doesn't change), and 4 is orange (doesn't change)--and you've got a really nice template that describes every possible solution.
Take a question like 19 to illustrate that. From our template we know that if there are two experiments there are only three possible combinations: 1+2 3+4, 1+3 2+4, 1+4 2+3. So just determine what colors each of those would produce and find a matching answer. C is correct because 1+2 makes red, and 3+4 makes blue.
I hope that helps to clarify things!
Jon Denning
PowerScore Test Preparation
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