Library/PT 121/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Leading questions—questions that hint at a specific answer—can change what witnesses remember, whether the question is asked on purpose or by accident. Even if judges stop leading questions in court, earlier questions from police, lawyers, reporters, or others can already have altered a witness’s memory. Studies show we only clearly store details we pay attention to, and suggested details that don’t directly conflict with our memory are often accepted either as confirmations or as fills for missing pieces. Memories fade over time, so small or side details (like a shirt color) are especially likely to be filled in by suggestion—even though those details can later be very important in deciding who did what.

Logic Breakdown

Find the author's central claim about the effect of leading questions on memory—focus on statements that leading questions introduced before testimony can alter memories (see experimental findings and the stop-sign example).

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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20.

Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?

Correct Answer
B
The passage's main point is that leading questions introduced prior to courtroom testimony can alter eyewitness memory and thus produce inaccuracies in testimony. Support: "But their exclusion from the courtroom by no means eliminates the remote effects of earlier leading questions on eyewitness testimony. Alarmingly, the beliefs about an event that a witness brings to the courtroom may often be adulterated by the effects of leading questions..."; "Recent studies have confirmed the ability of leading questions to alter the details of our memories..."; and the concrete example: "An eyewitness who is asked, prior to courtroom testimony, \"How fast was the car going when it passed the stop sign?\"... the \"stop sign\" datum has now been introduced, and when later recalled... it may be processed as belonging to the original memory even if the witness actually saw no stop sign." The passage also notes: "The farther removed from the event, the greater the chance of a vague or incomplete recollection and the greater the likelihood of newly suggested information blending with original memories," and that tangential details "may nevertheless be crucial to the courtroom issues"—all of which directly match option B's claim.
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