Question 1
A. "supercomputers cannot solve" is too extreme.
B. "prevented the solution" again too extreme.
C. "growing use of parallel computer systems" is a meaningless extension of what was meant in the passage. This can be categorised as 'Broad'.
D. Even though this has been stated as the answer, I beg to differ. If we focus on the first and the last line, and even if on the whole passage,(the tree and honeycomb structure) the main point was always how Emeagwali had always focussed on nature to solve problems and how this paradigm shift will help future endeavors. The words "that would be difficult to solve with more traditional designs." in the option indicates that a constant comparison has been made throughout the passage,
which I feel is wrong. The background focus has always been the 'Nature', even when problems with parallel systems were described.
E. This seems the best fit.
Question 2
A. "computers that work sequentially obsolete.' - Alien, since nothing about this has been mentioned in the passage.
B. "request by an oil company." - again, Alien.
C. This seems okay, since Emeagwali solved this problem.
D. "first computer scientist to use nature as a model" is an extrapolation (Broad), since someone else might have used it but was unsuccessful, or might have used Nature to develop technology, but didn't leverage Nature as a solution to complex technical problems like Emeagwali.
E. "parallel processing" is again Broad, since we are talking about parallel computers here.
Question 3
A. This seems best fit, since Emeagwali has to believe it in the first place to have been able to solve complex technical problems using Nature.
B. Contradicts information in passage.
C. "Most" is an extrapolation. Moreover, the passage talks about complex technical problems being solved using Nature and not "computer systems".
D. "practical enough to warrant their use even in relatively mundane computing tasks." - Alien, not mentioned in the passage.
E. "primarily" is Extreme.
Question 4
A. "established paradigm that Emeagwali’s work has challenged." - too extreme, since the statements articulate the problems.
B. Seems appropriate since it explains the problems due to which "supercomputers are unable to accurately predict".
C. Not an example of a network design based on "branching structures of trees."
D. Not a mathematical model
E. Not an example of a paradigm shift.
Question 5
A. Seems appropriate since unawareness is the reason behind scientists becoming more prone to refer to nature post Emeagwali’s work.
B. An extra information, and few variables yet to be discovered doesn't mean scientists will refer to Nature to discover those variables.
C. Alien. Nothing about success of computer designs affects Emeagwali’s predictions.
D. Alien. Nothing about mathematical principles of Emeagwali affects his predictions, since it just indicates that Emeagwali had continually referred to nature in his quest to solve complex technical problems.
E. Alien. Designers being unaware of mathematical principles of their own traditional technologies doesn't affect the predictions.
Question 6
A. Extended(Broad). Nothing about supercomputers being able to solve most of the problems have been mentioned.
B. Close and Extended (Broad). Probably the possibility was considered and because of the limitations (resolved later by Emeagwali) of the approach, was later rejected.
C. Alien. Nothing about general public can be inferred.
D. Alien. Nothing about need of oil companies can be inferred.
E. Seems appropriate since this is exactly the problem that has been solved by Emeagwali.