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Tiger beetles are such fast runners that they can capture

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Re: GMATPREP - CR - Tiger Beetles (what a ripper) [#permalink] New post 29 May 2008, 16:05
I encountered this yesterday on GMATPrep. Its as fresh in my mind as fresh can get. I even double checked it now in gmatprep. The answer is indeed C. If you compare, the answer options are in a different order in the other thread. The C here is B there.
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Re: GMATPREP - CR - Tiger Beetles (what a ripper) [#permalink] New post 25 Jun 2008, 01:05
This question is in GMATPrep. The OA is C.

Hyp1: The Tiger beetles can not maintain their pace (they are tired) so that can not catch the insect
Hyp2: The Tiger beetles are unable to process the resulting rapidly changing visual information ==> Need pause to recover eyes' ability.

C says that after the pause, Tiger beetles gain speed to catch the insect. C is best.
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Re: GMATPREP - CR - Tiger Beetles (what a ripper) [#permalink] New post 25 Jun 2008, 11:11
lexis wrote:
This question is in GMATPrep. The OA is C.

Hyp1: The Tiger beetles can not maintain their pace (they are tired) so that can not catch the insect
Hyp2: The Tiger beetles are unable to process the resulting rapidly changing visual information ==> Need pause to recover eyes' ability.

C says that after the pause, Tiger beetles gain speed to catch the insect. C is best.



Also with ups and downs, It does stop for a while (tired) which supports Hyp1..but does not stop for every up and every down( visual problem) it encounters, which undermines Hyp2.
because Hyp2 says beetle stops because of changing visual information.
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Re: GMATPREP - CR - Tiger Beetles (what a ripper) [#permalink] New post 25 Jun 2008, 22:19
chan4312 wrote:
lexis wrote:
This question is in GMATPrep. The OA is C.

Hyp1: The Tiger beetles can not maintain their pace (they are tired) so that can not catch the insect
Hyp2: The Tiger beetles are unable to process the resulting rapidly changing visual information ==> Need pause to recover eyes' ability.

C says that after the pause, Tiger beetles gain speed to catch the insect. C is best.



Also with ups and downs, It does stop for a while (tired) which supports Hyp1..but does not stop for every up and every down( visual problem) it encounters, which undermines Hyp2.
because Hyp2 says beetle stops because of changing visual information.


If they are tired they will not "maintain a fixed time interval between pauses", because it is cyclic movement.

After the pause, the beetles increase speed. Ìf they tired, they will not gain speed anymore (after several pauses).
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Re: GMATPREP - CR - Tiger Beetles (what a ripper) [#permalink] New post 18 Jul 2008, 12:24
C

Hypothesis 1: Cannot keep pace and pauses to rest
Hypothesis 2: Cannot process info and goes blind

Correct answer will support one of the hypothesis and undermine the other.

I solved this one using a table.

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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2008, 18:40
C seems correct!

Which of the following, if discovered in experiments using artificially moved prey insects, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other?


H1: not in control
H2: going blind

A) When a prey insect is moved directly toward a beetle that has been chasing it, the beetle immediately stops and runs away without its usual intermittent stopping. [Undermines H1 and H2]

B) In pursuing a swerving insect, a beetle alters its course while running and its pauses become more frequent as the chase progresses. [Supports H1 and H2]

C) In pursuing a moving insect, a beetle usually responds immediately to changes in the insect’s direction, and it pauses equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline. [ Undermine H2 but supports H1]

D) If, when a beetle pauses, it has not gained on the insect it is pursuing, the beetle generally ends its pursuit. [irrelevant]

E) The faster a beetle pursues an insect fleeing directly away from it, the more frequently the beetle stops. [Supports both H1 and H2]
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2008, 19:19
i'll go with E.

B and C sound attractive but the stimulus says that the beetle goes blind, it doesnt say that it's sight comes back and it resumes the chase

Last edited by bigtreezl on 29 Sep 2008, 19:21, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2008, 19:21
B, C and E seem appealing. However, B and E involve too much information beyond the original statement. I would go for C.
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2008, 19:41
pampas11 wrote:
Please, could you provide how you reached your answer? Particularly, how you undermined the other conclusion? Thank you.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tiger beetles are such fast runners that they can capture virtually any nonflying insect. However, when running toward an insect, a tiger beetle will intermittently stop and then, a moment later, resume its attack. Perhaps the beetles cannot maintain their pace and must pause for a moment’s rest; but an alternative hypothesis is that while running, tiger beetles are unable to adequately process the resulting rapidly changing visual information and so quickly go blind and stop.

Which of the following, if discovered in experiments using artificially moved prey insects, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other?

A) When a prey insect is moved directly toward a beetle that has been chasing it, the beetle immediately stops and runs away without its usual intermittent stopping.-> here this will undermine both -> no stopping and moving away
B) In pursuing a swerving insect, a beetle alters its course while running and its pauses become more frequent as the chase progresses. -> this supports both hence cant say whether it goes blind or to pick up speed it pauses
C) In pursuing a moving insect, a beetle usually responds immediately to changes in the insect’s direction, and it pauses equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline. ->

THIS APT since when the insect changes direction and the beetle pauses frequently both in upward incline and downward incline !!!
the pauses is same which does not mean to control speed since ireespective of slope hence only reason is that it goes blind....

D) If, when a beetle pauses, it has not gained on the insect it is pursuing, the beetle generally ends its pursuit. -> OOS

E) The faster a beetle pursues an insect fleeing directly away from it, the more frequently the beetle stops. -> this supports both since the insect moves away ,the reason may be it wants to pick up speed or it must be the insect goes blind

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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2008, 20:31
pampas11 wrote:
Please, could you provide how you reached your answer? Particularly, how you undermined the other conclusion? Thank you.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tiger beetles are such fast runners that they can capture virtually any nonflying insect. However, when running toward an insect, a tiger beetle will intermittently stop and then, a moment later, resume its attack. Perhaps the beetles cannot maintain their pace and must pause for a moment’s rest; but an alternative hypothesis is that while running, tiger beetles are unable to adequately process the resulting rapidly changing visual information and so quickly go blind and stop.

Which of the following, if discovered in experiments using artificially moved prey insects, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other?

A) When a prey insect is moved directly toward a beetle that has been chasing it, the beetle immediately stops and runs away without its usual intermittent stopping.
B) In pursuing a swerving insect, a beetle alters its course while running and its pauses become more frequent as the chase progresses.
C) In pursuing a moving insect, a beetle usually responds immediately to changes in the insect’s direction, and it pauses equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline.
D) If, when a beetle pauses, it has not gained on the insect it is pursuing, the beetle generally ends its pursuit.
E) The faster a beetle pursues an insect fleeing directly away from it, the more frequently the beetle stops.


H1 -> cannot maintain pace, needs rest

H2 -> cannot absorb visual info, overwhelmed, gets blind for a short period and hence stops

C weakens H2 by saying a beetle usually responds immediately to changes in the insect’s direction. so irrespective of how the moving insect changes directions it is able to grasp the visual info.

C supports H1 by saying it pauses equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline. taking rest and then getting back to chase

E IMO supports both. insect going fast, beetle cannot maintain pace. takes rest.

insect moving fast and beetle cannot comprehend visual info ,takes a pause.

I would pick C
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 29 Sep 2008, 22:31
I will go for E.
One reason is that it supports the 1st hypothesis because the faster it will run, it will get tired and want rest
second reason is the beetle is able 2 see the variation in insect's speed, thats y it is also running fast. so cant be blind.

pampas11 wrote:
Please, could you provide how you reached your answer? Particularly, how you undermined the other conclusion? Thank you.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tiger beetles are such fast runners that they can capture virtually any nonflying insect. However, when running toward an insect, a tiger beetle will intermittently stop and then, a moment later, resume its attack. Perhaps the beetles cannot maintain their pace and must pause for a moment’s rest; but an alternative hypothesis is that while running, tiger beetles are unable to adequately process the resulting rapidly changing visual information and so quickly go blind and stop.

Which of the following, if discovered in experiments using artificially moved prey insects, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other?

A) When a prey insect is moved directly toward a beetle that has been chasing it, the beetle immediately stops and runs away without its usual intermittent stopping.
B) In pursuing a swerving insect, a beetle alters its course while running and its pauses become more frequent as the chase progresses.
C) In pursuing a moving insect, a beetle usually responds immediately to changes in the insect’s direction, and it pauses equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline.
D) If, when a beetle pauses, it has not gained on the insect it is pursuing, the beetle generally ends its pursuit.
E) The faster a beetle pursues an insect fleeing directly away from it, the more frequently the beetle stops.
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 30 Sep 2008, 00:50
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IMO C.

Hypothesis1 is: tiger beetles are unable to adequately process the resulting rapidly changing visual information
Hypothesis2 is: so quickly go blind and stop.

Only C states the scenario to support hypothesis1 but hurt hypothesis2. "responds immediately to changes in the insect’s direction" supports the hypothesis1 while ignores the blind issue.

In E whether beetle stops due to blindness or changing variation is not clear. Whereas C clearly states the cause.
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 30 Sep 2008, 01:32
Hey this isnt right question. The correct question is as follows:

Tiger beetles are such fast runners that they can capture virtually any nonflying insect. However, when running toward an insect, the beetles intermittently stop, and then, a moment later, resume their attack. Perhaps they cannot maintain their pace and must pause for a moment's rest; but an alternative hypothesis is that while running tiger beetles are unable to process the resulting rapidly changing visual information, and so quickly go blind and stop.

Which of the following, if discovered in experiments using artificially moved prey insects, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other ?

A) When a prey insect is moved directly toward a beetle that has been chasing it, the beetle immediately turns and runs away without its usual intermittent stopping.

B) The beetles maintain a fixed time interval between pauses, although when an insect that had been stationary begins to flee, the beetle increases its speed after the next pause.

C) In pursuing a moving insect, the beetles usually respond immediately to changes in the insect's direction, and pause equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline.

D) If, when the beetle pauses, it has not gained on the suspect while pursuing, the beetle generally ends the pursuit.

E) When an obstacle is suddenly introduced just in front of the running beetles, the beetles stop immediately, but they never respond by running around the barrier.

OA B

This is original GMAT Prep SC
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 30 Sep 2008, 01:57
jatinrai wrote:
Hey this isnt right question. The correct question is as follows:

Tiger beetles are such fast runners that they can capture virtually any nonflying insect. However, when running toward an insect, the beetles intermittently stop, and then, a moment later, resume their attack. Perhaps they cannot maintain their pace and must pause for a moment's rest; but an alternative hypothesis is that while running tiger beetles are unable to process the resulting rapidly changing visual information, and so quickly go blind and stop.

Which of the following, if discovered in experiments using artificially moved prey insects, would support one of the two hypotheses and undermine the other ?

A) When a prey insect is moved directly toward a beetle that has been chasing it, the beetle immediately turns and runs away without its usual intermittent stopping.

B) The beetles maintain a fixed time interval between pauses, although when an insect that had been stationary begins to flee, the beetle increases its speed after the next pause.

C) In pursuing a moving insect, the beetles usually respond immediately to changes in the insect's direction, and pause equally frequently whether the chase is up or down an incline.

D) If, when the beetle pauses, it has not gained on the suspect while pursuing, the beetle generally ends the pursuit.

E) When an obstacle is suddenly introduced just in front of the running beetles, the beetles stop immediately, but they never respond by running around the barrier.

OA B

This is original GMAT Prep SC


That makes much sense now. I was not able to arrive at one answer from the original question that pampas11 has posted.
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Re: CR: Tiger Beetle [#permalink] New post 30 Sep 2008, 17:05
This Question is from OG 11th Edition. Dignostic Test Q25. The OA is B.

I was tempted for C, too. But now I have to find out why C is wrong answer...

Thank you for all your help!
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Re: CR:Tough One: Tiger Beetles [#permalink] New post 28 Dec 2010, 15:30
B for me.

alters its course while running: not blind.
and its pauses become more frequent as the chase progresses: need to rest.
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Re: CR:Tough One: Tiger Beetles [#permalink] New post 06 Apr 2011, 08:17
This question is from OG12 - Diagnostic Verbal 25
OA is B.
I don't understand why C is wrong. Could anyone explain?
Thanks in advance.
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Re: CR:Tough One: Tiger Beetles   [#permalink] 06 Apr 2011, 08:17
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