Note: This is video #2 in a two-part explanation using the split approach for comparative passages. In the previous video, J.Y. already tackled whatever questions he could based solely on a readthrough of Passage A. In this video, he picks up with Passage B and then cleans up the remaining questions. So, if you don't see a full explanation for a given question in this video, it's because J.Y. tackled that question in the previous video. (Press shift + ← to head to the previous video.)

26 comments

Biologist: Some small animals will instinctively go limp, “playing dead” when caught by a predator. But it is hard to see how playing dead can have survival value in this situation. The predator means to eat the animal just the same, whether or not it plays dead.

"Surprising" Phenomenon

Small animals sometimes play dead despite seemingly gaining no survival advantage from doing so.

Objective

The right answer will be a hypothesis that explains why small animals play dead. This explanation must make playing dead a rational thing for small animals to do when they’re caught by predators, likely by pointing out some survival advantage that the behavoir brings them.

A
Many small animal species will play dead when surprised by a loud noise or unexpected movement.

This seems as irrational as the behavior described in the stimulus. Why would playing dead protect small animals from the predators they imagine caused the loud noise or unexpected movement?

B
Predators often leave their food in a hiding place rather than eating it immediately.

If the small animals tried to escape, predators would know to kill them. But since predators think the small animals are dead, they simply bring them to a hiding spot to eat later. This allows the small animals to escape, which makes playing dead a clever, rational thing to do.

C
A small animal is more likely to play dead when caught by a predator if the predator species is common in the area.

We need to know how playing dead could possibly be useful for small animals. We don’t care about how common the predators are.

D
Most predators prey upon a variety of species, not all of which play dead when caught.

Sure, but why does it help small animals to play dead? We need to know how the behavior could be beneficial.

E
Many small animal species that do not play dead are capable of fighting off predators.

We know that the small animals in question were caught, so they’re definitely not fighting back. We need to know why they play dead rather than struggle to get free.


12 comments

Note: This video deals with Passage A only. In this video, J.Y. uses the split approach for comparrative passages. This means he reads through Passage A and then makes a first pass through the questions, answering them to the extent possible based solely on the information in Passage A. For an explanation of Passage B and the remaining unsolved questions, head to the next video (shift + → on your keyboard).

7 comments

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mN_Te9c8-7c


42 comments