- Tue Jul 31, 2018 6:38 am
#48991
Hi, I was between A and B and ultimately chose B. I understand how A is correct-- if a disease altered the pattern of the blood vessels in the retina, then upon a second scanning, the machine may not recognize this person's retina as having been scanned into the system before because the disease has created a new pattern.
However, I am struggling with B. The stimulus says that no two eyes have identical patterns. So that must mean that the left and right eye of a person have different patterns. But the scanner can still determine if it's scanned a retina by looking at one eye? If you negate B, it says that some people have different patterns in their left and right eye. But based on the stimulus, the scanner can (somehow) determine if it has scanned a retina from that person by even scanning one eye?
However, I am struggling with B. The stimulus says that no two eyes have identical patterns. So that must mean that the left and right eye of a person have different patterns. But the scanner can still determine if it's scanned a retina by looking at one eye? If you negate B, it says that some people have different patterns in their left and right eye. But based on the stimulus, the scanner can (somehow) determine if it has scanned a retina from that person by even scanning one eye?