Library/PT 136/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Approach: Identify the passage's central claim by noting the repeated criticisms of current fingerprint practice—lack of objective standards, unknown probabilities for matches, and limited systematic study of error rates. Key supporting sentences from the passage: Fingerprint examiners lack objective standards for evaluating whether two prints "match."; There is simply no consensus about what constitutes a sufficient basis for identification; Although we know that different individuals can share certain ridge characteristics, the chance of two individuals sharing any given number of identifying characteristics is unknown; The error rate for fingerprint identification in actual practice has received little systematic study; a more rigorous test showed a 34 percent rate of erroneous identification.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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8.

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

Correct Answer
D
Choice D is correct because Passage B's overall point is that multiple fundamental problems attend current fingerprint-identification practice. The passage repeatedly cites lack of objective/uniform standards (no consensus; point-counting vs. holistic approaches), unknown probabilities for how often different people will share given characteristics (especially for partial or smudged prints), and inadequate systematic study of real-world error rates (one rigorous test found a 34% error rate). Those criticisms combine to form a broad, negative assessment of the field's current practices, which D summarizes.
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