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It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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QUESTION 4 - OE


(C). Specific detail questions ask for something absolutely true according to the passage. This question asks specifically about the children who were able to wait. Choice (C) is correct; the second paragraph states that “if [the children] could wait a few minutes to eat [the first marshmallow], they would receive a second one.” Incorrect choices (A), (B), (D), and (E) describe the children who didn’t wait.
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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Kimberly99 wrote:
Hi Brent GreenlightTestPrep
Could you help clarify in Question 2, why is not D but B?
Thanks Brent


Question: The passage suggests which of the following about the traits of indolence and apathy?

(B) They may be regarded as the effects of a tendency toward extreme discounting.
We are told "Behavioral economists have identified extreme discounting in experiments in which subjects were offered either a dollar immediately or three dollars the next day. Individuals who consistently choose significantly smaller rewards for their immediacy are described as “present-biased.”
So, extreme discounting = present-biased
We are later told: "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be manifestations of present bias"
Perfect!!
extreme discounting = present-biased AND present bias manifest causes indolence and apathy
Answer Choice B looks good.

(D) THEY may seem innocuous, but they have serious ramifications.
For this answer. THEY refers to the traits of indolence and apathy
However, the passage tells us that: Present-bias may seem innocuous, but it has serious ramifications.
Since traits of indolence and apathy are not the same as Present-bias, answer choice D is incorrect.
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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Explain the questions and get a Kudos!
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It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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QUESTION 1 - OE

(D). The first paragraph introduces the phenomenon of “discounting”: the reduction in the perceived value of a delayed reward. Discounting can account for “straightforward” effects such as the time value of money, but “more dramatic” manifestations are also hinted at. Some of these dramatic manifestations of “extreme discounting” are described in the second paragraph. That paragraph introduces “present-bias” by describing two experiments (one in which $1 now is preferred to $3 tomorrow, and another in which children struggle to resist marshmallows). The consequences of the marshmallow experiment are stated and ruminated upon in a larger social context (how present-bias may prevent material success). Thus, the second paragraph elaborates upon a particular, extreme version of the phenomenon introduced in the first paragraph and draws out a few larger implications. Regarding choice (A), the second paragraph does not explain where discounting comes from psychologically. Regarding choice (B), the first paragraph does not really introduce a “proposition” per se, which would be a claim of some sort. Rather, the first paragraph simply defines a phenomenon. Additionally, the second paragraph does not “qualify” (limit) the first paragraph in any way. As for choice (C), the author has staked out no position in the first paragraph; he or she has only described a phenomenon. The second paragraph does not take an alternative point of view, either. As for choice (E), there are no true “specific examples” introduced in the first paragraph for the second paragraph to draw conclusions from.
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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Hi Brent GreenlightTestPrep
Could you help clarify in Question 2, why is not D but B?
Thanks Brent
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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Kimberly99 wrote:
Thanks Brent GreenlightTestPrep
Make sense now.

To clarify why is (C) not right then? As it seems the given answer choice and statement match up?

(C) They may be manifested in present-bias

If "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be manifestations of present bias"
Here THEY refers to the traits of indolence and apathy


It all has to do with the word order.

The passage says "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be MANIFESTATIONS OF present bias."
This means present bias can cause indolence and apathy.

Answer choice C says: The traits of indolence and apathy may be MANIFESTED IN present-bias.
This means indolence and apathy can cause present bias. (backwards order)
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
GreenlightTestPrep wrote:
Kimberly99 wrote:
Hi Brent GreenlightTestPrep
Could you help clarify in Question 2, why is not D but B?
Thanks Brent


Question: The passage suggests which of the following about the traits of indolence and apathy?

(B) They may be regarded as the effects of a tendency toward extreme discounting.
We are told "Behavioral economists have identified extreme discounting in experiments in which subjects were offered either a dollar immediately or three dollars the next day. Individuals who consistently choose significantly smaller rewards for their immediacy are described as “present-biased.”
So, extreme discounting = present-biased
We are later told: "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be manifestations of present bias"
Perfect!!
extreme discounting = present-biased AND present bias manifest causes indolence and apathy
Answer Choice B looks good.

(D) THEY may seem innocuous, but they have serious ramifications.
For this answer. THEY refers to the traits of indolence and apathy
However, the passage tells us that: Present-bias may seem innocuous, but it has serious ramifications.
Since traits of indolence and apathy are not the same as Present-bias, answer choice D is incorrect.


Thanks Brent GreenlightTestPrep
Make sense now.

To clarify why is (C) not right then? As it seems the given answer choice and statement match up?

(C) They may be manifested in present-bias

If "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be manifestations of present bias"
Here THEY refers to the traits of indolence and apathy
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
GreenlightTestPrep wrote:
Kimberly99 wrote:
Thanks Brent GreenlightTestPrep
Make sense now.

To clarify why is (C) not right then? As it seems the given answer choice and statement match up?

(C) They may be manifested in present-bias

If "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be manifestations of present bias"
Here THEY refers to the traits of indolence and apathy


It all has to do with the word order.

The passage says "Traits such as indolence and apathy may indeed be MANIFESTATIONS OF present bias."
This means present bias can cause indolence and apathy.

Answer choice C says: The traits of indolence and apathy may be MANIFESTED IN present-bias.
This means indolence and apathy can cause present bias. (backwards order)


Whoop..what a twisted wording...
Crystal clear now thanks Brent GreenlightTestPrep :please: :thumbsup: :)
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Re: It is no revelation that people prefer immediate rewards. What is less [#permalink]
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