Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages debate whether fingerprint evidence is trustworthy. The defendant says fingerprinting isn’t well tested: examiners can’t point to proof that prints are unique, there’s no set rule for how many matching points make a match, and we don’t know how often mistakes happen. Passage A, from the court, defends fingerprinting because it has been used for 100 years, experts agree it’s generally reliable, and examiners get training and tests so the trial was justified in trusting it. Passage B says the opposite: there are no clear objective standards, partial or smudged prints make matches uncertain, the chance of accidental matches is unknown, and stricter studies have shown many errors (one found a 34% error rate).
Logic Breakdown
Scan both passages for descriptions of fingerprint-identification methods; look for wording about "point-counting" or "points and characteristics" vs. holistic approaches.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.Both passages allude to a method of fingerprint identification in which examiners
Correct Answer
C
Passage B: "Some examiners use a \"point-counting\" method that entails counting the number of similar \"ridge\" characteristics on prints..." Passage A: "fingerprint examiners are held to a consistent \"points and characteristics\" approach to identification." Both passages therefore allude to a method in which examiners count the number of characteristics two prints have in common.
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