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Explaining why B is wrong in Question 7:

The passage states-"Also, a jury may give more probative weight than objective analysis would allow to vivid photographic evidence depicting a shooting victim’s wounds"

7. (B) Juries usually overestimate the value of visual evidence such as photographs.- incorrect, there are two issues with B

i. the passage talks about jury may. So we can't infer that it happens usually
ii. the passage talks about vivid photographic evidence and not just any photographs

Hope this helps! :)
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Explanation

6. It can be inferred from the passage that the author would be most likely to agree with which of the following generalizations about lawyers?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

Consistent with the overall idea that those involved in the judicial process could benefit from the insights of cognitive psychologists.

(B) is too extreme; the passage does say that “complex and voluminous” evidence is often confusing for juries, but it doesn’t accuse lawyers of attempting to confuse juries.

(C) Outside the scope—the inferential abilities of judges and lawyers are never compared.

(D) is also outside the scope. The passage suggests no conscientious pursuit of the truth on the part of lawyers. (Ahem.)

(E) distorts Para 1; the author says that lawyers call the inferential process “fact-finding,” but this is far short of saying that they are unrealistic about the abilities of juries.

Answer: A

Hope it helps
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Official Explanation

4. Which one of the following best describes the author’s attitude toward the majority of judges today?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

Captures both the tone and thrust of para 4. Judges have been guilty of having only a “limited and primitive concept of jury error” and failing to acknowledge psychologists’ research into the problem.

(A) has the wrong verb—LSAT authors are rarely if ever going to sound “apprehensive.” We can’t recall a single instance.

(B) distorts the passage; it’s the juries, not the judges, who are making unwarranted conclusions.

(D) is also a distortion. There’s nothing in para 4 that actually suggests opposition from judges, nor, as we noted in Q.3(B), is the passage advocating “significant changes in trial procedure.”

(E) should scream “wrong paragraph.” Para 2 mentions excessively complex evidence, but it doesn’t seem to be the judges’ fault.

Answer: C

Hope it helps
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SajjadAhmad please help me understand Q.4

The passage says "Nonetheless, most judges now employ only a limited and primitive concept of jury inferential error: limited because it fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations, primitive because it ignores"

Here singular pronoun "it" cannot stand for the plural noun "judges" Thus I assumed "it" refers to the jury

Moreover, I don't understand how the tone of para 4 is "judges have been guilty of..."

I don't think "Nonetheless" is sufficient to give this tone of "guilty"
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Hoozan
SajjadAhmad please help me understand Q.4

The passage says "Nonetheless, most judges now employ only a limited and primitive concept of jury inferential error: limited because it fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations, primitive because it ignores"

Here singular pronoun "it" cannot stand for the plural noun "judges" Thus I assumed "it" refers to the jury

Moreover, I don't understand how the tone of para 4 is "judges have been guilty of..."

I don't think "Nonetheless" is sufficient to give this tone of "guilty"

Probably your question is incomplete, or maybe complicated enough for me to understand. What do you want in question number 4? any answer option or anything else?
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Hoozan
SajjadAhmad please help me understand Q.4

The passage says "Nonetheless, most judges now employ only a limited and primitive concept of jury inferential error: limited because it fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations, primitive because it ignores"

Here singular pronoun "it" cannot stand for the plural noun "judges" Thus I assumed "it" refers to the jury

Moreover, I don't understand how the tone of para 4 is "judges have been guilty of..."

I don't think "Nonetheless" is sufficient to give this tone of "guilty"

Probably your question is incomplete, or maybe complicated enough for me to understand. What do you want in question number 4? any answer option or anything else?

When we see the last few sentences if para 4 "Judges have been guilty of having only a “limited and primitive concept of jury error” and failing to acknowledge psychologists’ research into the problem."

We see that it was the jury who failed to recognize the potential errors ...and it was the jury who ignored the research...

But according to the official answer it was the judges who did so

How is this possible?
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Hoozan
SajjadAhmad
Hoozan
SajjadAhmad please help me understand Q.4

The passage says "Nonetheless, most judges now employ only a limited and primitive concept of jury inferential error: limited because it fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations, primitive because it ignores"

Here singular pronoun "it" cannot stand for the plural noun "judges" Thus I assumed "it" refers to the jury

Moreover, I don't understand how the tone of para 4 is "judges have been guilty of..."

I don't think "Nonetheless" is sufficient to give this tone of "guilty"

Probably your question is incomplete, or maybe complicated enough for me to understand. What do you want in question number 4? any answer option or anything else?

When we see the last few sentences if para 4 "Judges have been guilty of having only a “limited and primitive concept of jury error” and failing to acknowledge psychologists’ research into the problem."

We see that it was the jury who failed to recognize the potential errors ...and it was the jury who ignored the research...

But according to the official answer it was the judges who did so

How is this possible?

Read the last 8 Lines of the last para

In fact, one of a presiding judge’s duties is to minimize jury inferential error through explanation and clarification. Nonetheless, most judges now employ only a limited and primitive concept of jury inferential error: limited because it fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations, primitive because it ignores the research and conclusions of psychologists in favor of notions about human cognition held by lawyers.

Now read answer option C

Apart from this you can read explanation in link below

https://gmatclub.com/forum/faced-with-t ... l#p2385711

Hope it helps
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SajjadAhmad
Why option C of question 1 is incorrect?

Ill be glad if you could explain.
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SajjadAhmad
Why option C of question 1 is incorrect?

Ill be glad if you could explain.


Hi deveshj21,

Through out the passage, author discusses the inferential errors and how they are committed. He also mentions how the jury normally rely on cognitive tools, that result in such inferences that cause distortion of truth rather than its revelation. This idea can be inferred from option A. Option C, though correct, it not the main idea, as it is just a subset of the main concern of the passage. Why and how jurors make errors in judgment is the main intent of the passage.


Let me know if this helps.
Thanks.
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deveshj21
SajjadAhmad
Why option C of question 1 is incorrect?

Ill be glad if you could explain.

(C) is too specific and focuses on a detail of one particular cause of jury error mentioned in Paragraph 3. That is why it is wrong.
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primitive because it ignores the research and conclusions of psychologists in favor of notions about human cognition held by lawyers. I did not understand this sentence . Can anyone explain what does it mean???
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akt715
primitive because it ignores the research and conclusions of psychologists in favor of notions about human cognition held by lawyers. I did not understand this sentence . Can anyone explain what does it mean???

The paragraph from which this text belongs:

The fact that juries can commit inferential errors that jeopardize the accuracy of the fact-finding process is not unknown to the courts. In fact, one of a presiding judge’s duties is to minimize jury inferential error through explanation and clarification. Nonetheless, most judges now employ only a limited and primitive concept of jury inferential error: limited because it fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations, primitive because it ignores the research and conclusions of psychologists in favor of notions about human cognition held by lawyers.

Here primitive mean is prehistoric/basic (employing a jury to avoid inferential error, a jury keeping in mind the only prehistoric inferential errors fails to recognize the potential for errors outside certain traditional situations).
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Can you please help with Q7? Is C wrong because of use of "usually" than "may"?
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anurag2018
Can you please help with Q7? Is C wrong because of use of "usually" than "may"?

Hi anurag2018

(C) is tricky, but it’s not a generalization that the author would agree with. Remember, the passage says that preconceptions about defendants with prior convictions influence juries, not that preconceptions about defendants in general are problematic.
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Hi Experts (GMATNinja VeritasKarishma )
Can you please help me with the Question No 1. Its asking about main idea of the passage. And I got stuck between A and E. After some analysis, I decided to go with E.
What is actually the primary purpose of the author? Just to tell about the inferential errors or to tell about the issues in and ways of mitigating those errors? If second case is true, then correct answer may be option E.
Please clarify. I could not know where I am going wrong. Thank you.
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Mck2023
Hi Experts (GMATNinja VeritasKarishma )
Can you please help me with the Question No 1. Its asking about main idea of the passage. And I got stuck between A and E. After some analysis, I decided to go with E.
What is actually the primary purpose of the author? Just to tell about the inferential errors or to tell about the issues in and ways of mitigating those errors? If second case is true, then correct answer may be option E.
Please clarify. I could not know where I am going wrong. Thank you.

Mck2023

I understand your confusion but (A) is correct.

Nowhere does the author mention who should instruct the juries. He only tells us that the judges use a limited and primitive scope. Perhaps the judges could start instructing based on psychologists' conclusions. The point of the passage is not who should instruct but inferential errors juries make.
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Q2 - In this - "By applying the same cognitive tools they have developed and used over a lifetime, jurors engage in the inferential exercise that lawyers call fact-finding.”
Should this not indicate the answer to be E rather than D?
Not sure, though I was inbetween the two - if someone could clarify why not D - that would be great!!

(D) specific training for judges in the area of jury instruction

(E) restrictions on lawyers’ use of psychological research
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