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
Compare what Passage B does that Passage A does not; look for explicit references to a study or reported experimental results in Passage B.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage2.Passage B, but not passage A, seeks to achieve its purpose by
Correct Answer
B
Passage B achieves its purpose by discussing the results of a recent scientific experiment. Support from Passage B: In a recent study, researchers regularly stimulated the leg muscles of mice over a two-week period, during which time the muscle cells gained nuclei and increased in size. The researchers then let the muscles rest. As the muscles atrophied, the cells deflated to about 40 percent of their bulked-up size, but the number of nuclei in the cells did not change. These sentences show Passage B uses experimental findings to explain muscle memory, whereas Passage A presents hypotheses and anecdotal/psychological explanations without reporting an experiment.
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