- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22709
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus consists of related information that infers a definite conclusion. If the distance animals travel and the size of the groups in which they travel is correlated with their diets, and diet depends on the sizes and shapes of teeth and faces, we know that the shapes and sizes of teeth and faces should be somewhat correlated with the mentioned distance and group size.
Answer choice (A): Since the stimulus does not give any information as to what type of diet would indicate a far-ranging animal, this choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus does not indicate what kind of diet would indicate a larger animal. This choice is not supported by the stimulus, and is wrong.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus contains absolutely no information that discusses behavior within a herd, and this response is incorrect. The stimulus establishes a relationship between teeth and the general type of animal, not between teeth and the specific behavior of one animal.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus establishes that certain teeth and faces are necessary for certain diets, not that those teeth and faces were sufficient to establish anything. On the broad level, that makes this choice wrong. Specifically, the stimulus never discussed species, only general behavior, so this answer choice is also entirely off-topic.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus infers that teeth and faces are correlated with group size and travel. This answer choice correctly refers to group size by discussing "herds." If you eliminated this choice on the grounds that the stimulus does not discuss herds, you should remember that the correct answer choice is allowed to reference the stimulus using different phrasings and word choices, and "herd" is definitely an acceptable reference to the discussion of group size.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus consists of related information that infers a definite conclusion. If the distance animals travel and the size of the groups in which they travel is correlated with their diets, and diet depends on the sizes and shapes of teeth and faces, we know that the shapes and sizes of teeth and faces should be somewhat correlated with the mentioned distance and group size.
Answer choice (A): Since the stimulus does not give any information as to what type of diet would indicate a far-ranging animal, this choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus does not indicate what kind of diet would indicate a larger animal. This choice is not supported by the stimulus, and is wrong.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus contains absolutely no information that discusses behavior within a herd, and this response is incorrect. The stimulus establishes a relationship between teeth and the general type of animal, not between teeth and the specific behavior of one animal.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus establishes that certain teeth and faces are necessary for certain diets, not that those teeth and faces were sufficient to establish anything. On the broad level, that makes this choice wrong. Specifically, the stimulus never discussed species, only general behavior, so this answer choice is also entirely off-topic.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus infers that teeth and faces are correlated with group size and travel. This answer choice correctly refers to group size by discussing "herds." If you eliminated this choice on the grounds that the stimulus does not discuss herds, you should remember that the correct answer choice is allowed to reference the stimulus using different phrasings and word choices, and "herd" is definitely an acceptable reference to the discussion of group size.