Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Pigeons can be taken far from home and still find their way back, and scientists offer two main ideas: either pigeons keep track of their outward movement, or they have an internal “map” that tells them where home is. The movement-tracking idea looks weak because changing magnets, moving them in the dark, or anesthetizing them usually doesn’t stop them, though no one has tried all those tests together. The map idea—especially that pigeons use smells carried by the wind—has some support (plugging nostrils sometimes makes birds confused), but other studies suggest nose-plugging may just upset the birds or that blocking smell doesn’t stop orientation. So the smell-map idea seems promising but the real explanation is still uncertain.
Logic Breakdown
The passage raises the hypothesis that pigeons might be "reading the minds of the experimenters." To test that hypothesis, pick the experiment that removes the handlers' knowledge of the pigeons' home so they cannot (intentionally or unintentionally) cue the birds.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.Which one of the following experiments would best test the "possibility that has not escaped investigation" referred to in the second sentence of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
A is correct because it directly eliminates the experimenters' knowledge of the pigeons' home and thus prevents any unintentional cueing by handlers. The passage explicitly raises that hypothesis: "Aside from reading the minds of the experimenters (a possibility that has not escaped investigation), there are two basic explanations..." Making handlers unaware of the home location isolates the mind-reading hypothesis—if pigeons still orient correctly, mind-reading is unlikely; if orientation depends on handlers' knowledge, that would support the hypothesis.
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