- Sat Jun 27, 2020 1:07 pm
#76580
Hey there claudiagarin, the reason that E is incorrect is that we have no idea what guessing strategy would have been rational, even though we know in hindsight what strategy would have been more successful. Rationality just never comes into play in this stimulus.
The proof of the correct answer is based on Formal Logic, which is basically math. We know that the image usually appeared at the top, which means more than half of the time. We also know that most people were wrong more than half of the time. So let's use some simple numbers to analyze those facts.
Imagine there were just 10 images shown. More than half - 6 of them - were shown at the top. Most people were wrong more than half the time, so at least 6 wrong answers. Is there any way they could have been correct every time they guessed the bottom, and still gotten 6 wrong answers? If they never guessed bottom, and made 10 guesses of top, they would have been right 6 times, but we know that didn't happen. If they guessed bottom four times and were right every time, they also would have guessed top 6 times and also been right every time, getting a perfect score, which did not happen.
Play with those number a bit and you will see that they must have guessed bottom at least a couple times when the image appeared at the top. Otherwise, they would have been right more than half the time instead of wrong more than half the time.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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