GRE Critical Reasoning
Critical Reasoning questions test the ability to understand, analyze, and evaluate arguments. Some of the abilities tested by specific questions include identifying the roles played by specific phrases or sentences in an argument, recognizing the point of an argument, recognizing assumptions on which an argument is based" drawing conclusions and forming hypotheses, identifying methods of argumentation, evaluating arguments and counter-arguments, and analyzing evidence.
Each of the Critical Reasoning questions is based on a short argument, a set of statements, or a plan of action. For each question, select the best answer of the choices given.
An oil company conducted an investigation of the environmental effects of oil spills and concluded that waterfowl exposed to oil spills have a 95 percent survival rate. The investigation, based on the examination of waterfowl admitted t6 a veterinary clinic near the site of a recent oil spill, noted that only one in twenty affected waterfowl died.
#1
A test of the National Weather Service’s storm- detecting radar systems found that the 1957 system is ten times more reliable than the new computerized system. Therefore, the technology used in the new radar system must be less sophisticated than the radar technology used in the 1957 system.
#2
A doctor investigated whether an insufficient amount of dopamine in the brain causes Parkinson’s disease. The doctor injected dopamine into the bloodstreams of patients with Parkinson’s disease. The progress of the disease was not halted, nor did any of the patients improve. The doctor concluded that Parkinson’S disease must be caused by some- thing other than a lack of dopamine in the brain.
#3
Geological and historical evidence shows that earth- quakes in the eastern United States can be as powerful as those in California and can strike a much larger area. An eastern earthquake will jolt an area 100 times greater than the area that would be affected by a California quake of comparable magnitude.
#4
The major goal of physical education programs in schools is to help all children become physically fit. But only a small proportion of children ever participate in team sports. Moreover, team sports usually do less to encourage fitness in participants than do physical education programs that focus directly on aerobic exercise.
#5
United States advertising agencies are increasingly using interviews at shopping malls, called “mall intercepts,” to test for advertising effectiveness, product concept viability, and consumer buying habits. Critics of mall intercepts maintain that the shopping habits of mall shoppers are not representative of those of the larger population.