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- Fri Dec 20, 2019 10:43 am
#72661
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (A).
This question is a good test of tracking information through what is a rather dense stimulus. The key is to not get lost in the many details provided, and to stop for a moment and make sure the two occasions discussed in the stimulus are clear. So, with that in mind, what happened in this Fact Set?
In the study, there are two "occasions" (as the answer choices term it):
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. We know that each student was suggested a different illness in the first occasion, so if they then went to the second patient and suggested what they had discussed in the first occasion, then for the second patient those six tests each had to be different.
Answer choice (B): We do not know that the medical students "knew," just what they were told on the first occasion and what they did on the second occasion.
Answer choice (C): We do not know what the physicians were aware of during the trials, just what they said on the first occasion and what they did on the second occasion.
Answer choice (D): We do not have any information about what illness the patient actually had, or whether the students were right about the tests ordered.
Answer choice (E): We do not know what the medical students were aware of, just what they were told on the first occasion and what they did on the second occasion.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (A).
This question is a good test of tracking information through what is a rather dense stimulus. The key is to not get lost in the many details provided, and to stop for a moment and make sure the two occasions discussed in the stimulus are clear. So, with that in mind, what happened in this Fact Set?
In the study, there are two "occasions" (as the answer choices term it):
- In the first, six medical students examined the same patient, but for each student there was a physician there who asked a leading or suggestive questions about a different malady for that patient. So, for example, maybe the patient had a bad cough. For the first student the physician might say something like, "What tests should we order to try to rule out a diagnosis of bronchitis?" Then to the second student, the physician might ask, "What tests should we order to try to rule out a diagnosis of sinusitis?" And so on.
A week later, the same six students were presented another patient with the same exact symptoms they had seen in the patient the prior week. This time there was no leading question from the physician, just a straight request for a diagnosis. In each case, the student then started by testing the same illness suggested by the physician in the first occasion.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. We know that each student was suggested a different illness in the first occasion, so if they then went to the second patient and suggested what they had discussed in the first occasion, then for the second patient those six tests each had to be different.
Answer choice (B): We do not know that the medical students "knew," just what they were told on the first occasion and what they did on the second occasion.
Answer choice (C): We do not know what the physicians were aware of during the trials, just what they said on the first occasion and what they did on the second occasion.
Answer choice (D): We do not have any information about what illness the patient actually had, or whether the students were right about the tests ordered.
Answer choice (E): We do not know what the medical students were aware of, just what they were told on the first occasion and what they did on the second occasion.
Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/