Library/PT 142/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

“Stealing thunder” is when a lawyer admits a client's bad fact before the other side brings it up. Lawyers do this only if the other side is likely to mention the fact, because mock trials and psychology suggest it often helps: it can make the lawyer seem honest, warn jurors so they resist the opponent’s later arguments, make the evidence seem less new and therefore less persuasive, and let the lawyer present the fact in a less damaging way. But if the fact is very damaging, saying it early can create a strong negative first impression that shapes how jurors view everything else.

Logic Breakdown

Function/primary-purpose question: read the final sentence and its surrounding context, then check each answer against that language. Here the passage says early information creates a framework that affects jurors' later processing, so pick the choice that best paraphrases that effect.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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12.

The author discusses the "cognitive framework" that jurors create (final sentence of the passage) primarily to

Correct Answer
A
The final paragraph explicitly links early impressions to later evaluation: 'Jurors, who often initially have little information about a case, are usually eager to solidify their position regarding the case. They can therefore be expected to use the early positive framing to guide their subsequent analysis of the trial information.' and 'when information is very damaging, stealing thunder may create an early negative impression that forms a cognitive framework for jurors, who then filter subsequent information through this schema.' Option A paraphrases this exactly: it says early information can influence how jurors evaluate later information.
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