Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT104 S3 P3 Q21 Explanation

Homing Pigeons

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsNon-Author OpinionScience

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Passage

Homing pigeons can be taken from their lofts and transported hundreds of kilometers in covered cages to unfamiliar sites and yet, when released, be able to choose fairly accurate homeward bearings within a minute and fly home. Aside from reading the minds of the experimenters (a possibility that has not escaped investigation), of their environment and then “place” themselves with respect to home on some internalized coordinate system.

The first alternative seems unlikely. One possible model for such an inertial system might involve an internal magnetic compass to measure the directional leg of each journey. Birds transported to the release site wearing magnets or otherwise subjected to an artificial magnetic field, however, are only occasionally affected. Alternately, if pigeons measure in total darkness, anesthetized, rotating, and with the magnetic field reversed all at the same time.

The other alternative, that pigeons have a “map sense,” seems more promising, yet the nature of this sense remains mysterious. Papi has posited that the map sense is olfactory: that birds come to associate odors borne on the wind with the direction in which the wind is blowing, and so slowly build showing that pigeons whose nostrils have been plugged are poorly oriented at release and home slowly.

One problem with the hypothesis is that Schmidt-Koenig and Phillips failed to detect any ability in pigeons to distinguish natural air (presumably laden with olfactory map information) from pure, filtered air. Papi’s experimental results, moreover, admit of simpler, nonolfactory explanations. It seems likely that the behavior of nostril-plugged birds results from the olfactory epithelium is sprayed with anesthetic to block smell-detection but not breathing, orientation is normal.

What this question is testing

Non-Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
21.

Given the information in the passage, it is most likely that Papi and the author of the passage would both agree with which one of the following statements

Answer choices

  1. Author Disagrees9% picked this

    The map sense of pigeons is most probably related to their

    This was Papi's theory, but the author spends the majority of the final paragraph presenting evidence that undermines this theory.

  2. Both Would Disagree2% picked this

    The mechanism regulating the homing ability of pigeons is most probably similar to that

    Both Papi and the author are thinking the homing pigeons probably use some sort of map sense, not the displacement mechanism used by honeybees. They would agree that this answer is saying something wrong.

  3. Correct71% picked this

    The homing ability of pigeons is most probably based on a

    Why this is right

    This is supported by the first two sentences of the 3rd paragraph. The 2nd sentence of that paragraph is saying "Papi has posited that the map sense is olfactory", so clearly Papi is convinced that the pigeons are using a map sense. The 1st sentence of that paragraph reveal the author's opinion: "The other alternative, that pigeons have a map sense, seems more promising".

    Skill tested: Non-Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Author Disagrees4% picked this

    The experiments conducted by Papi himself have provided the most valuable evidence yet collected regarding the

    This has some really loaded language (the most valuable evidence yet). Neither Papi nor the author heap these superlatives on Papi's research. Also, in the final paragraph the author is undermining Papi's takeaways by bringing up alternate explanations for his results (maybe the pigeons' ability to home was impaired just because of the trauma and discomfort of having plugged nostrils).

  5. Author Disagrees14% picked this

    The experiments conducted by Schmidt-Koenig and Phillips have not substantially lessened the probability that Papi’s

    The author's final paragraph is piling a lot of skepticism on Papi's theory. The experiments conducted by Schmidt-Koenig and Phillips are part of that skepticism. Those experiments undermined the Papi's hypothesis that olfactory senses were guiding the pigeons' navigation. If the pigeons were using their sense of smell to pick on environmental clues about direction, then they wouldn't be able to guide themselves if we gave them sterile, filtered air (like from an oxygen mask). And yet, S-K's and P's experiments showed that the pigeons weren't noticing any difference between natural, smelly, "information-laden" air and sterile, smell-less filtered air.

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