Verbal problems from the *free* official practice tests and
problems from mba.com
tanyatomar
Students
 
Posts: 49
Joined: Fri Sep 02, 2011 6:44 am
 

episodic memory

by tanyatomar Mon Jul 16, 2012 10:07 pm

i did not find this passage in search. hence posting this question:


The term "episodic memory" was
introduced by Tulving to refer to what he
considered a uniquely human capacity-
Line the ability to recollect specific past events,
(5) to travel back into the past in one's own
mind-as distinct from the capacity simply
to use information acquired through past
experiences. Subsequently, Clayton et al.
developed criteria to test for episodic
(10) memory in animals. According to these
criteria, episodic memories are not of
individual bits of information; they involve
multiple components of a single event
"bound" together. Clayton sought to
(15) examine evidence of scrub jays' accurate
memory of "what," "where," and "when"
information and their binding of this infor-
mation. In the wild, these birds store food
for retrieval later during periods of food
(20) scarcity. Clayton's experiment required
jays to remember the type, location, and
freshness of stored food based on a unique
learning event. Crickets were stored in one
location and peanuts in another. Jays
(25) prefer crickets, but crickets degrade
more quickly. Clayton's birds switched
their preference from crickets to peanuts
once the food had been stored for a certain
length of time, showing that they retain
(30) information about the what, the where,
and the when. Such experiments cannot,
however, reveal whether the birds were
reexperiencing the past when retrieving the
information. Clayton acknowledged this by
using the term "episodic-like" memory.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Q5:
According to the passage, Clayton's experiment depended on the fact that scrub jays
A. recall "when" and "where" information more distinctly than "what" information
B. are not able to retain information about a single past event for an indefinitely long period of time
C. choose peanuts over crickets when the crickets have been stored for a long period of time
D. choose crickets over peanuts whenever both are available
E. prefer peanuts that have been stored for a short period to crickets that have been stored for a short period



i chose C
however it was mentioned that corect answer is D. i think if they dont choose peanuts over crickets after a long time of storage=> they dont consider time. therefore it shud be C..
anyone knows the correct answer to this one...
this is a GMAT Prep question.
aditrustagi
Forum Guests
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun May 13, 2012 6:33 pm
 

Re: episodic memory

by aditrustagi Tue Jul 17, 2012 8:58 am

Hi Tanya, The question asks about 'Clayton's experiment depended on the fact'. It does not asks us about what actually happened in the experiment. The basis for Jay's experiment was whenever Jays have an option for Crickets and Peanuts , Jays's will go for Crickets. N because of the episodic memory Jays knew that Crickets would have been degraded, hence they went for peanuts.So i suppose the ans shd be D
tanyatomar
Students
 
Posts: 49
Joined: Fri Sep 02, 2011 6:44 am
 

Re: episodic memory

by tanyatomar Tue Jul 17, 2012 11:02 am

ya got it.... :)
thanks a lot:)
jnelson0612
ManhattanGMAT Staff
 
Posts: 2664
Joined: Fri Feb 05, 2010 10:57 am
 

Re: episodic memory

by jnelson0612 Mon Jul 30, 2012 1:35 am

Great, and yes, thank you very much! :-)
Jamie Nelson
ManhattanGMAT Instructor
douyang
Course Students
 
Posts: 26
Joined: Wed Sep 04, 2013 9:24 pm
 

Re: episodic memory

by douyang Sat Jul 11, 2015 7:02 pm

aditrustagi Wrote:Hi Tanya, The question asks about 'Clayton's experiment depended on the fact'. It does not asks us about what actually happened in the experiment. The basis for Jay's experiment was whenever Jays have an option for Crickets and Peanuts , Jays's will go for Crickets. N because of the episodic memory Jays knew that Crickets would have been degraded, hence they went for peanuts.So i suppose the ans shd be D



The answer should be C instead of D.

D is clearly too extreme as jay does NOT choose crickets over peanuts whenever both are available. The passage states that "Clayton's birds switched their preference from crickets to peanuts once the food had been stored for a certain length of time"

C is correct answer
RonPurewal
Students
 
Posts: 19744
Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2007 8:23 am
 

Re: episodic memory

by RonPurewal Sun Jul 12, 2015 4:22 am

for this discussion to continue, we need a screenshot of this problem from the FREE gmat prep software.

here the original post has line numbers.
if there are line numbers, then it is quite unlikely that the problem is from the GMAT Prep freeware. (there are no line numbers in GMAT Prep—yellow highlighting is used instead—and it is very unlikely that anyone would randomly add line numbers while transcribing the problem.)

so, screenshot please. thanks.