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
Scan paragraph 2 for the experimental findings about how subtly introduced new data are processed; the passage explicitly states the ways such new data are retained.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.Which one of the following is mentioned in the passage as a way in which new data suggested to a witness by a leading question are sometimes processed?
Correct Answer
A
The passage states: "we tend to process such new data similarly whether they correspond to details as we remember them, or to gaps in those details. In the former case, we often retain the new data as a reinforcement of the corresponding aspect of the memory." This explicitly supports option A (new data are integrated with current memories as support for those memories).
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