Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some tech developers try to 'communicate risks' by downplaying dangers, which makes people distrust experts. But the real goal should be to help people make informed choices, so communicators need to know what the public already believes and understands. Ordinary people often judge risks by values (for example, risks to children seem worse) but they also know factual information and can understand risks if given clear facts and time. Using that knowledge to design clear, balanced messages — as in a radon brochure made after interviews — helps people understand risks better than a standard pamphlet.
Logic Breakdown
Contrast the first paragraph's depiction of risk communicators (who seek to persuade the public that risks are small and blame laypeople's alarm) with the authors' view that laypeople's ethical/value beliefs shape their risk perceptions; choose the answer that reflects the authors' emphasis.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.It can be inferred that the authors of the passage would be more likely than would the risk communicators discussed in the first paragraph to emphasize which one of the following?
Correct Answer
E
The passage states that "Lay people's definitions of \"risk\" are more likely to reflect subjective ethical concerns than are experts' definitions" and gives the example that "Lay people, for example, tend to perceive a small risk to children as more significant than a larger risk to consenting adults who benefit from the risk-creating technology." It also says "Risk communication should therefore be based on the principle that people process new information in the context of their existing beliefs." These lines show the authors would emphasize the impact of lay people's value systems on their perceptions of risk (choice E) rather than the persuasive, dismissive stance attributed to some risk communicators in paragraph 1.
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