Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages ask why people who once built muscle regain it faster later. Passage A suggests two simple ideas: training might teach your nerves to turn on more muscle fibers, or the person trains harder and faster the second time because they already know what they can do. Passage B describes a mouse study that found muscles pick up extra cell nuclei when they grow, and those nuclei stay even after the muscle shrinks, so they can help rebuild muscle quickly. In short, muscle memory could come from nerve changes, leftover cell parts, or from how people choose to train.
Logic Breakdown
Find the question both passages address by comparing their main points: both describe the 'muscle memory' phenomenon (easier retraining) and offer competing explanations (neural, psychological, cellular).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Both passages seek an answer to which one of the following questions?
Correct Answer
C
Both passages explicitly ask why people who previously built muscle find it easier to build muscle again. Passage A: "Bodybuilders who start training again after a period of inactivity find that gaining muscle size seems easier the second time around—even if starting from the same place." Passage A then explores explanations (neural recruitment and a psychological explanation): "One potential explanation...increase the percentage of muscle fibers that are stimulated by neurons...When you're making a comeback, this ability...may remain intact" and "Then again, it's also possible that the ease of retraining has nothing to do with your muscles: it could all be in your head." Passage B opens with the same phenomenon and gives a cellular explanation: "Pumping up is easier for people who have been buff before, and now scientists think they know why..." and reports that "the number of nuclei in the cells did not change...Since the extra nuclei don't die, they could be poised to make muscle proteins again, providing a type of muscle memory at the cellular level." These lines show both passages seek to explain why building muscle is easier for people who have done so in the past.
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