Explanation for Question 15 From the Reading Section on the 2020 March Sat
Okay. So 15 says when the author refers to certain studies as classic 2 in lines, 21 and 52, she must know the means that what these studies 3 are, what? Um, so we have to go back to 21. 4 We have to go back to the Q2 21. 5 We have classic here. 52. We have classic here. 6 Okay. Let's read a little bit around it. Right? 7 So in particular interests, see there's seemingly, 8 um, and features often involves space in one classic study, 9 Mike Tucker and Mark Ellis at the university of clients, 10 ask them to judge whether I, as we're up to anniversary. 11 So classic here can mean like, you know, 12 well-regarded famous, um, 13 has been done multiple times or, 14 you know, I've said, well, regarded, like people respected. 15 People know what it is. Um, 16 here let's do this one. So when the auditor near reverse the response by 17 members as well into getting into the simply, 18 it was not something that were being faster and more accurately, one end than 19 the other, another classic illustration of a seemingly unnecessary connection between space. 20 And then he's saying another classic. So it's again, 21 it's going to be well-regarded well-established um, 22 uh, Don. Well, right. The experiment is respected. 23 Um, yeah, 24 so it was another classic illustration with seemingly unnecessary connection between space and cognition 25 comes from mental rotation experiments. 26 Got it. Um, so yeah, 27 let's see. Any of those words are mentioned here, 28 so he's not saying they're sim...