Library/PT 157/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages discuss prediction markets. Passage A says markets turn many people’s opinions into one number quickly and often accurately because participants risk real money; examples (the Iowa Electronic Markets and an experiment) show markets learn fast and reward correct guesses. Passage B disagrees that markets are perfect, noting a case where a market long favored the eventual loser and arguing that these markets mostly reflect current majority opinion—like a paid poll that is more serious but still can be wrong.

Logic Breakdown

Scan Passage B for a distinct image or metaphor that is not present in Passage A; the correct answer names a term explicitly invoked only in B.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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12.

Passage B, but not passage A, advances its argument in part by referring to which one of the following?

Correct Answer
B
Passage B explicitly uses a racetrack analogy: 'Think of markets as racetracks: you get paid lower odds the better the horse looks before a race.' That metaphor is central to B's argument about how markets set odds and reflect majority opinion. Passage A contains no racetrack analogy; it instead describes markets' efficiency and gives examples like the Iowa Electronic Markets and contract-based betting.
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