Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The Ultimatum Game gives one person $100 to split and the other person can accept or reject the offer; if rejected, neither gets anything. Studies show most proposers offer about half, and many responders turn down very small offers even though refusing leaves them with nothing — which pure self-interest can’t explain. One idea (that fairness comes from needing group support) doesn’t fully explain why responders reject low offers, so the passage argues that our emotions, shaped by life in small groups where reputation mattered, make us reject unfair offers to protect our self‑esteem and get better treatment in future interactions.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: look for explicit, structural descriptions of the game in the passage (search for language about who the players are and whether interactions are repeated or anonymous). Supporting sentences from the passage: 'In an experiment, two strangers are given the opportunity to share $100...' and 'our emotions are therefore not finely tuned to one-time, strictly anonymous interactions' / 'Because one-shot interactions were rare during human evolution, our emotions do not discriminate between one-shot and repeated interactions.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.The passage implies that the Ultimatum Game is
Correct Answer
D
D is correct because the passage explicitly frames the Ultimatum Game as an interaction between strangers with a single accept-or-reject decision and even uses the phrases 'one-time, strictly anonymous interactions' and 'one-shot interactions' to describe this kind of exchange. Those statements directly support describing the game as a type of one-shot, anonymous interaction.
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