Hi, This is from the RC part of a CAT exam:
Insect-eating bats rely heavily on echolocation, a method of sensory perception by which certain animals orient themselves to their surroundings, detect obstacles, communicate with others, and find food. While using echolocation, these bats emit a series of short, high-frequency sounds from their mouths or nostrils that bounce off objects and surfaces and then return to the animals’ ears. Since high-frequency waves do not diffract, or bend, extensively, these ultrasonic vibrations provide bats with accurate maps of their surroundings. The biosonar of some bats is so advanced that it allows them to fly in complete darkness, snatch moving insects out of the air, or hover just above water level to drink.
For years, scientists have been aware that bats emit slightly different frequencies in differing situations. Recent research has provided insight into how certain physical features help bats use this variability to differentiate among objects in their environments. Many species of bats have elaborate, intricately shaped flaps, or noseleaves, around their nostrils that are adorned with grooves and spikes. Three-dimensional computer simulations of these noseleaves revealed that furrows along the top of the noseleaves act as cavities that resonate strongly with certain frequencies of sound. As a result, the grooves cause different frequencies of sound to discharge in different directions. Lower frequency sounds are spread more vertically, while higher frequency sounds emit more horizontally. The complexity the noseleaves add to the bats’ ultrasound perception could help the bats perform difficult tasks, such as locating prey while avoiding obstacles.
Which of the following can properly be inferred from the passage?
The sound waves a bat emits during echolocation only travel parallel or perpendicular to the bat's motion.
The spikes found on bats’ noseleaves are rarely utilized during echolocation.
Many insect-eating bats do not possess a well-developed sense of sight.
Low-frequency sound waves diffract less extensively than high-frequency sound waves.
During echolocation, bats do not rely on low-frequency sound waves.
Im not sure why the answer is (E) vs (C). At the end, it says the bats use the low-frequencies to 'avoid obstacles'... and echolocation is the use of frequencies to locate ones surroundings.
I chose (C) over (E) because I thought that since bats 'rely heavily on echolocation' allowing them to 'orient themselves to their surroundings', this is akin to what sight is used for. So, if you say they rely heavily on that, can't you infer that they dont have a well developed sense of sight?
Hmm..?