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
Approach: read the sentence containing the quoted claim and the sentences immediately following it in paragraph two; compare each choice to the psychological mechanisms the author lists (credibility, previewing/counterarguments, scarcity/framing) and eliminate choices that overstate or are unsupported.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.By saying that certain studies have suggested that in some applications, "the technique is, in fact, effective " (first sentence of the second paragraph), the author most likely means that those studies have given evidence that the technique in question
Correct Answer
A
Choice A is correct. The passage says simulated-trial studies suggest the technique is effective and then gives psychological reasons that map directly onto A: 'volunteering damaging information early may create an image of credibility. Psychological research suggests that people who reveal information that appears to be against their own best interest are likely to be perceived as more credible and thus may be more persuasive.' The passage also explains that when both sides present the same evidence it 'may be seen as less scarce—becoming old news' and 'should carry less weight than if it had been included only in hostile testimony.' Those passages show stealing thunder tends to make jurors view the client more favorably or reduce the damaging impact of the evidence, which is what A states.
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