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Which one of the following best expresses the main idea of the passage?
When making decisions in certain predictable situations, juries may commit inferential errors that ob-scure rather than reveal the truth
The views of human cognition taken by cognitive psychologists on the one hand and by the legal profession on the other are demonstrably dissimilar.
When confronting powerful precon-ceptions, particularly shocking evi-dence, or complex, situation, jurors make errors in judgment.
The problem of inferential error by juries is typical of the difficulties with cognitive processes that people face in their everyday lives.
- ? Your answer is Option 1: When making decisions in certain predictable situations, juries may commit inferential errors that obscure rather than reveal the truth. This captures the essence of the passage, which focuses on how jurors can make errors in judgment, distorting reality in specific situations.
- Option 2: This suggests a comparison between psychologists' and lawyers' views on human cognition. While the passage mentions a difference, it primarily discusses jury errors, not a direct comparison.
- Option 3: This details specific instances of juror errors, but it doesn't encompass the passage's broader focus on predictable errors.
- Option 4: It suggests a generalization about cognitive difficulties but doesn't tie directly to the jury-specific errors emphasized in the passage.
By: Munesh Kumari ProfileResourcesReport error
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