Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Science depends on experiments giving the same result when repeated, but Sommerer and Ott made a computer model showing a particle in a special force field where the tiniest, even undetectable, change in how you start it can lead to a completely different outcome. They compare this to spilling water on land that usually runs to one of two lakes: if the dividing line between the lake areas is extremely jagged, drops a hair's breadth apart can end up in different lakes and you have to actually spill the water to know. In their model that jagged, unpredictable boundary fills the whole field, so you cannot even predict roughly where the particle will go; if other systems like this exist, they could explain why some experiments cannot be replicated and would challenge the idea that repeatability is always possible.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the passage's central claim: how Sommerer and Ott's "riddled basins" model could explain failed experimental replications; locate the sentences that explicitly link the model to replication failures.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
B
B is correct. The passage presents Sommerer and Ott's model as a system in which tiny, undetectable changes in starting conditions can radically alter outcomes and then explicitly connects the existence of other such systems to failed attempts to replicate experiments. Support: "Sommerer and Ott have conceived of a physical system in which even the least change in the starting conditions—no matter how small, inadvertent, or undetectable—can alter results radically." "In the system posited by the two physicists, this boundary expands to include the whole system: i.e., the entire force field is riddled with fractal properties, and it is impossible to predict even the general destination of the particle given its starting point." Most directly: "If other such systems do exist, metaphorical examples of riddled basins of attraction may abound in the failed attempts of scientists to replicate previous experimental results—in which case, scientists would be forced to question one of the basic principles that guide their work." These sentences show the passage's main point—that scientists who fail to replicate results might be working within physical systems that make replication virtually impossible—which option B accurately paraphrases.
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