Library/PT 113/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Researchers find that people hate losses more than they enjoy equal gains, so they often take bigger risks to avoid losing something they already have than they would to try to win the same amount. Economists once assumed people only gamble when the expected payoff is high, but experiments show people usually need a much larger possible gain to accept an equal chance of losing (for example, many won’t accept a 50% chance to lose $100 unless they could win over $300). The same tendency helps explain why countries sometimes take risky actions—like going to war—to recover territory they believe was taken from them, because they value getting it back more than the objective costs.

Logic Breakdown

Identify the author's primary purpose: the passage summarizes recent psychological findings about risk (loss aversion) and then applies those findings to international conflict—select the choice that describes that combined focus.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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25.

The passage can be most accurately described as

Correct Answer
D
The passage outlines recent psychological research on decision making—especially that losses loom larger than equivalent gains and that people sometimes take risks to avoid losses—and then explicitly applies those observations to international affairs. Support: "Recent investigations into the psychology of decision making have sparked interest among scholars seeking to understand why governments sometimes take gambles that appear theoretically unjustifiable on the basis of expected costs and benefits."; "Many of these discrepancies relate to the observation that a possible outcome perceived as a loss typically motivates more strongly than the prospect of an equivalent gain."; and "Such observations are quite salient to scholars of international conflict and crisis." These sentences show the author is examining new psychological considerations about risk and showing how they apply to another field, which matches choice D.
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