Library/PT 148/Sec 2/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Brain scans are clearly useful for finding physical problems, but using them to locate mental functions assumes the mind is made of separate parts in specific brain spots (the modular theory). Some psychologists, like Uttal, argue that mental processes are actually spread across the whole brain. fMRI images are produced by subtracting a resting measurement from an active-task measurement, so they show only the difference in activity and hide the brain's overall activity. That subtraction can make small areas look like they do the work alone, so the bright spots on scans can give a misleading impression that supports the modular view even if thinking is distributed.

Logic Breakdown

Find Uttal's claim in paragraph 2 and paraphrase it: he argues that mental processes are not separate modules but properties of a single, distributed mental activity across the brain.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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25.

According to the passage, psychologist William Uttal contends that the various mental processes are likely to be

Correct Answer
E
The passage states (para. 2): 'the various mental processes are likely to be properties of a more general mental activity that is distributed throughout the brain.' Answer E restates this directly—calling mental processes 'features of a general mental activity that is spread throughout the brain'—so E matches Uttal's contention exactly.
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