MartyMurray wrote:
Explanation
Psychologist: In an experiment, volunteers were asked to solve abstract arithmetic problems while their brains were being scanned. The brain scans revealed considerable activity in the linguistic-processing centers of the brain. However, it is likely that this activity reflected passing thoughts that are not an indispensable part of arithmetical reasoningprocesses.
The passage presents the followingconclusion:
it is likely that this activity (in the linguistic-processing centers of the brain) reflected passing thoughts that are not an indispensable part of arithmetical reasoningprocesses
No evidence for the conclusion isprovided.
Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest justification for the psychologist'sjudgment?
The question asks which choice "provides the strongest justification for the psychologist's judgment." Since "the psychologist's judgment" is another way of saying "the conclusion," the correct
...
Psychologist: In an experiment, volunteers were asked to solve abstract arithmetic problems while their brains were being scanned. The brain scans revealed considerable activity in the linguistic-processing centers of the brain. However, it is likely that this activity reflected passing thoughts that are not an indispensable part of arithmetical reasoningprocesses.
The passage presents the followingconclusion:
it is likely that this activity (in the linguistic-processing centers of the brain) reflected passing thoughts that are not an indispensable part of arithmetical reasoningprocesses
No evidence for the conclusion isprovided.
Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest justification for the psychologist'sjudgment?
The question asks which choice "provides the strongest justification for the psychologist's judgment." Since "the psychologist's judgment" is another way of saying "the conclusion," the correct
...
Statistics : Posted by katkot • on 18 Dec 2023, 02:43 • Replies 7 • Views 1369






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