Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT121 S2 P4 Q24 Explanation

Leading Questions

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

TopicsFive QuestionsLaw

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Passage

Leading questions—questions worded in such a way as to suggest a particular answer—can yield unreliable testimony either by design, as when a lawyer tries to trick a witness into affirming a particular version of the evidence of a case, or by accident, when a questioner unintentionally prejudices the witness’s response. For this or unintentionally by lawyers, police investigators, reporters, or others with whom the witness has already interacted.

Recent studies have confirmed the ability of leading questions to alter the details of our memories and have led to a better understanding of how this process occurs and, perhaps, of the conditions that make for greater risks that an eyewitness’s memories have been tainted by leading questions. These studies suggest that processed as belonging to the original memory even if the witness actually saw no stop sign.

The farther removed from the event, the greater the chance of a vague or incomplete recollection and the greater the likelihood of newly suggested information blending with original memories. Since we can be more easily misled with respect to fainter and more uncertain memories, tangential details are more apt to become constructed armed robbery, but later those factors might be crucial to establishing the identity of the perpetrator.

What this question is testing

Five Questions

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
24.

Which one of the following questions is most directly answered by information

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope: types of crimes2% picked this

    In witnessing what types of crimes are people especially likely to pay close attention

    We never discuss 'circumstantial' details, but we do talk about tangential, which means the same thing, in the final paragraph. There are no specific types of crimes mentioned other than armed robbery, but this is only mentioned in a random example.

  2. Out of Scope: reluctant to testify4% picked this

    Which aspects of courtroom interrogation cause witnesses to be especially reluctant to testify

    The passage never discusses witnesses who do not want to testify.

  3. Out of Scope: stress6% picked this

    Can the stress of having to testify in a courtroom situation affect the accuracy of

    We never discuss whether the stress of being in a live courtroom leads to memory errors.

  4. Out of Scope: variance in capacity6% picked this

    Do different people tend to possess different capacities for remembering

    Even though the answer to this question is surely "yes" (from common sense), the passage never gets into the variability of different people's capacity for accurate memories.

  5. Correct82% picked this

    When is it more likely that a detail of an observed event will

    Why this is right

    The last paragraph gives us at least a couple answers to this question. Its first sentence says that "the farther removed from the event, the greater the chance of a vague or incomplete recollection", so "an event being closer in time would make it more likely that a detail will be accurately remembered". The second sentence of that last paragraph says that "we can be more easily misled with respect to fainter and more uncertain memories", so "a vivid, certain memory is more likely to be accurately remembered". Central details are more likely to be accurately remembered than tangential details.

    Skill tested: Five Questions · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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