Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT139 S2 P2 Q8 Explanation

The Waggle Dance

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

TopicsPrimary PurposeScience

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Passage

Passage A In ancient Greece, Aristotle documented the ability of foraging honeybees to recruit nestmates to a good food source. He did not speculate on how the communication occurred, but he and naturalists since then have observed that a bee that finds a new food source returns to the nest and “dances” bee had discovered. Yet questions still remained regarding the precise mechanism used to transmit that information.

In the 1960s, Wenner and Esch each discovered independently that dancing honeybees emit low-frequency sounds, which we now know to come from wing vibrations. Both researchers reasoned that this might explain the bees’ ability to communicate effectively even in completely dark nests. But at that time many scientists mistakenly believed that honeybees information not from sound, but from odors the forager conveys from the food source.

Yet Gould has shown that foragers can dispatch bees to sites they had not actually visited, something that would not be possible if odor were in fact necessary to bees’ communication. Finally, using a honeybee robot to simulate the forager’s dance, Kirchner and Michelsen showed that sounds an essential role in conveying information about the food’s location.

Passage B All animals communicate in some sense. Bees dance, ants leave trails, some fish emit high-voltage signals. But some species—bees, birds, and primates, for example—communicate symbolically. In an experiment with vervet monkeys in the wild, Seyfarth, Cheney, and Marler found that prerecorded vervet alarm calls from a loudspeaker elicited the same call. These responses suggest that each alarm call represents, for vervets, a specific type of predator.

Karl von Frisch was first to crack the code of the honeybee’s dance, which he described as “language.” The dance symbolically represents the distance, direction, and quality of newly discovered food. Adrian Wenner and others believed that bees rely on olfactory cues, as well but this has turned out not to be so.

While it is true that bees have a simple nervous system, they do not automatically follow just any information. Biologist James Gould trained foraging bees to find food in a boat placed in the middle of a lake and then allowed them to return to the hive to indicate this new location. presumably because no pollinating flowers grow in such a place.

What this question is testing

Primary Purpose

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
8.

The passages have which one of the following aims

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope: human-like intelligence1% picked this

    arguing that certain nonhuman animals possess

    Even though the passages are singling out symbolic communication, which humans are capable of, neither passage got into whether animals have human-like intelligence.

  2. Out of Scope Passage A: primates6% picked this

    illustrating the sophistication with which certain

    Passage A is only about honeybees, which are insects, not primates.

  3. Correct78% picked this

    describing certain scientific studies concerned with

    Why this is right

    Sure, this is generic enough and true for both passages. In Passage A, there are several studies (Aristotle, von Frisch, Wenner, Gould) that all are focused on honeybee communication. In Passage B, there are studies (Seyfarth, von Frisch) that are focused on vervet monkey and honeybee communication, respectively.

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

  4. Out of Scope: controversy15% picked this

    airing a scientific controversy over the function of the

    Neither passage indicates there's any controversy about the function of the honeybee's dance - everyone understands that the dance is intended to direct other honeybees to potential food sources. Different experiments were aimed at figuring out the mechanism by which the honeybee's dance achieves its function (is it by smell? by sound?)

  5. Out of Scope: requirements of language1% picked this

    analyzing the conditions a symbolic system must meet in order to be

    Neither passage mentions any required characteristics something must have to be called "a language".

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