Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT121 S2 P4 Q26 Explanation

Leading Questions

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

TopicsAuthor OpinionLaw

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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

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
26.

It can be most reasonably inferred from the passage that the author holds that the recent studies discussed

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope19% picked this

    have produced some unexpected findings regarding the extent of human reliance on external verification

    Out of Scope: unexpected findings Out of Window: reliance on external Since the #1 thing we were told about "recent studies" is that they confirmed something we already suspected, it's not alluring to see this answer choice saying that recent studies gave us unexpected findings. And those first two sentences say nothing how much we rely on external verification of memory details. That fact that external sources can influence what we think we remember is not at all the same as saying we rely on external sources to verify our memories.

  2. Out of Scope: long controversy35% picked this

    shed new light on a longstanding procedural controversy in

    We have no way, in this Support Window or otherwise, to justify that leading questions have been a longstanding procedural controversy in the law. We were told in the first paragraph that "a judge can disallow such questions during interrogaation", and that's about all we know in terms of procedural stuff.

  3. Opposite: tenative / inconclusive2% picked this

    may be of theoretical interest despite their tentative nature and

    Every part of this seems wrong. These takeaways could be practical, not theoretical, since they actually help us better understand how leading questions trick someone into having false memories and under what conditions that is more likely to occur. And the fact that we have "recent studies confirmed" means that these are not tentative or inconclusive findings.

  4. Out of Scope: several types6% picked this

    provide insights into the origins of several disparate types of logically

    These two sentences we have are only talking about "leading questions". It's not really even fair to call THAT a type of logically fallacious reasoning (it's more a subtle form of brainwashing than a logical flaw), but we definitely aren't being told about several types of logic fallacies.

  5. Correct38% picked this

    should be of more than abstract academic interest to the

    Why this is right

    This answer takes a lot of common sense to support, because there's not one line reference that's a close equivalent. The logical opposite of abstract / theoretical is practical / useful / applied. Is the author thinking that we should have some practical real world reaction to these recent studies? Sure, that's supportable. The final sentence of the 1st paragraph features the author "sounding the alarm" about the potentially malign influence of leading questions earlier in the witness interview process. That last sentence says, Alarmingly, a witness's beliefs when entering the courtroom may have already been adulterated by leading questions introduced by lawyers. She invokes the "Recent studies" in the following sentence. The fact that "Recent studies" are cited immediately after naming an alarming problem with witnesses in the courtroom implies that these recent studies are related to this alarming problem, not just something our author is bringing up for pure abstract, academic interest. Common sense tells us that it is of practical interest to the legal profession to attain "a better understanding ... of the conditions that make for greater risks that an eyewitness's memories have been tainted by leading questions."

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

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