Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many assume top musicians, chess players, and athletes are great because of inborn talent, citing prodigies and inherited traits. But recent research shows elite performance mostly grows from years of early, focused, deliberate practice that builds domain-specific skills and even bodily changes; general abilities don’t stand out outside the person’s field. Most top adults weren’t exceptional children and rarely reach the top without about a decade of intense training, which can even work around basic limits. So the difference between good and great is best explained by sustained practice plus ordinary ability, with motivation and strong interest predicting success better than supposed innate talent.
Logic Breakdown
The passage argues that exceptional performance in domains like music, chess, and athletics is driven predominantly by acquired complex skills and training-induced physiological adaptations, not by exceptional innate talent. Evidence includes domain-specific advantages (athletes and chess players excel only in task-relevant tests), the rarity of top performance without 10+ years of deliberate practice, and anatomical changes due to extended training (with exceptions like height). The author concludes that extended intense training plus the level of talent common to competent performers can account for outstanding performance, and that motivation/interest predicts success better than innate talent.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.Which one of the following can most reasonably be inferred from the passage?
Correct Answer
A
Supportive text: "Recent research in different domains of excellence suggests that exceptional performance arises predominantly from acquired complex skills and physiological adaptations, rather than from innate abilities." "[T]he most accomplished athletes show a systematic advantage in reaction time or perceptual discrimination only in their particular fields of performance, not in more general laboratory tests for these factors." "Similarly, superior chess players have exceptional memory for configurations of chess pieces, but only if those configurations are typical of chess games." "[A] surprisingly large number of anatomical characteristics, including aerobic capacity and the percentage of muscle fibers, show specific changes that develop from extended intense training." Also, prior heritability estimates were based on "random samples of the general population rather than on studies of highly trained superior performers" and the conclusion: "The evidence does not, therefore, support the claim that a notion of innate talent must be invoked..." Together, these show that observed advantages in top performers are domain-specific and often training-induced, making it difficult (and in some cases perhaps impossible) to determine whether a highly trained superior performer possesses exceptional innate talent.
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