Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Scientists used to focus on sex hormones, but other hormones that keep our body fluids balanced also affect how much we drink and how much salt we eat. The body keeps the “saltiness” of blood (osmolality) steady by changing how much water and salt we take in or get rid of. Small changes are fixed when water shifts into or out of cells, but bigger changes cause hormones and behavior to act: if blood gets too dilute, the brain cuts vasopressin (a hormone that tells the kidneys to save water) so you pee more and stop feeling thirsty; if blood gets too salty, the brain releases vasopressin so the kidneys conserve water and you feel thirsty and drink. Thirst usually begins only after vasopressin has already worked to save as much water as the kidneys can.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: Find the passage's central claim about hormones and fluid regulation — that peptide and steroid hormones that maintain body-fluid homeostasis influence both physiological and behavioral responses, and those responses work together to restore plasma osmolality. Supporting sentences from the passage: 'Specifically, peptide and steroid hormones involved in maintaining the physiological balance, or homeostasis, of body fluids also appear to play an important role in the control of water and salt consumption.' and 'It is then that complementary physiological and behavioral responses come into play to restore plasma osmolality to normal.' Also: '...an increase in plasma osmolality...stimulates the release of vasopressin... This process is accompanied by increased thirst...'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.Which one of the following best states the main idea of the passage?
Correct Answer
D
D best captures the passage's main idea: the text explains that hormones (e.g., vasopressin) influence physiological processes (kidney water retention/excretion) and also influence behavior (thirst/salt intake), and that these physiological and behavioral responses complement one another in restoring plasma osmolality. The passage explicitly states that peptide and steroid hormones 'play an important role in the control of water and salt consumption' and that 'complementary physiological and behavioral responses come into play to restore plasma osmolality to normal,' and it gives the vasopressin/thirst examples showing hormonal influence and complementarity.
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