Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT125 S1 P4 Q22 Explanation

Groupthink

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TopicsStrengthenSociety

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Passage

In principle, a cohesive group—one whose members generally agree with one another and support one another's judgments—can do a much better job at decision making than it could if it were noncohesive. When cohesiveness is low or lacking entirely, compliance out of fear of recrimination is likely to be strongest. To overcome censor what they say out of fear of being punished socially for antagonizing their fellow members.

But group cohesiveness can have pitfalls as well: while the members of a highly cohesive group can feel much freer to deviate from the majority, their desire for genuine concurrence on every important issue often inclines them not to use this freedom. In a highly cohesive group of decision makers, the danger as "a deterioration of mental efficiency, reality testing, and moral judgment that results from in-group pressures."

Based on analyses of major fiascoes of international diplomacy and military decision making, researchers have identified groupthink behavior as a recurring pattern that involves several factors: overestimation of the group's power and morality, manifested, for example, in an illusion of invulnerability, which creates excessive optimism; closed-mindedness to warnings of problems and to factors that determine whether group cohesiveness will deteriorate into groupthink or allow for effective decision making.

What this question is testing

Strengthen

Your task

Find the choice that makes the argument's conclusion more likely to be true.

Common trap

Answers that are consistent with the argument but add no real support, or that strengthen a claim the argument doesn't make.

Winning move

Locate the gap between evidence and conclusion, then pick the choice that closes it.

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

The question
22.

Which one of the following, if true, would most support the author’s contentions concerning the conditions under which

Answer choices

  1. Weakens10% picked this

    A study of several groups, each made up of members of various professions, found that most

    This suggests that groups with low levels of cohesion also fall victim to groupthink, while the passage suggests that only groups with high levels of cohesion should be able to fall victim to groupthink (third paragraph).

  2. Weakens11% picked this

    There is strong evidence that respectful dissent is more likely to occur in cohesive groups than in groups in which

    Respectful dissent should reduce the risk of groupthink (second paragraph), so this would make cohesive groups less likely to fall victim to groupthink.

  3. Correct53% picked this

    Extensive analyses of decisions made by a large number of groups found no cases of groupthink in groups whose members

    Why this is right

    This is supported in the second paragraph.

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

  4. Weakens16% picked this

    There is substantial evidence that groupthink is especially likely to take place when members of a group develop factions whose

    The author contends that groupthink is likely to occur when group cohesion is high (second paragraph), while this would suggest the opposite.

  5. Too Weak10% picked this

    Ample research demonstrates that voluntary deference to group opinion is not a necessary factor for the

    The author contends that a highly cohesive group is a precondition of groupthink, but deference is not necessarily indicative a highly cohesive group. It could simply be compliance out of fear of recrimination (first paragraph).

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