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Free PDF Unparalleled GMAT - Graduate Management Admission Test Exam Lab Questions

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Admission Tests Graduate Management Admission Test Sample Questions (Q152-Q157):

NEW QUESTION # 152
In good times, an auction is the obvious choice for colectors wanting to sell a work of art, but A did just a few short months ago.

  • A. to do so, fewer of them put up their holdings for auction as they
  • B. to put their holdings up for auction, they don't, and fewer are doing so now than
  • C. to, fewer collectors are putting their holdings up for auction as
  • D. to, collectors aren't putting their holdings up for auction, and there are fewer than
  • E. to, less of them are putting their holdings up for auction than

Answer: E
NEW QUESTION # 153
In the suburbs surrounding Middletown, there is an average of 2.4 automobiles per family, and thus very few suburban residents use public buses. The suburban communities, therefore, would derive little benefit from continuing to subsidize the portion of Middletown's public bus system that serves the suburbs.
Which of the following, if true, casts the most serious doubt on the conclusion drawn above?

  • A. Public buses operated with less than a 35 percent occupancy rate produce more pollution per passenger mile than would the operation of private automobiles for each passenger.
  • B. The real-estate tax rate in Middletown is higher than it is in the suburbs.
  • C. Last year voters in the suburban communities defeated by a narrow margin a bill designed to increase subsidies for public bus routes.
  • D. Most voters in Middletown's suburban communities are unwilling to continue subsidies for public buses next year if rider ship on those buses drops below current levels.
  • E. Many suburban shops can attract enough employees to remain in business only because subsidized public transportation from Middletown is available.

Answer: E Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION # 154
Under current federal law, employers are allowed to offer their employees free parking spaces as a tax- free benefit, but they can offer employees only up to $180 per year as a tax-free benefit for using mass transit. The government could significantly increase mass transit rider ship by raising the limit of this benefit to meet commuters' transportation costs.
The proposal above to increase mass transit rider ship assumes that

  • A. current mass transit systems are subject to unexpected route closings and delays
  • B. using mass transit creates less air pollution per person than using a private automobile
  • C. the parking spaces offered by employers as tax-free benefits can be worth as much as $2,500 per year
  • D. because of traffic congestion on major commuter routes, it is often faster to travel to one's place of employment by means of mass transit than by private automobile
  • E. many employees are deterred by financial considerations from using mass transit to commute to their places of employment

Answer: E Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION # 155
Journal
The editor of Metathesis, a new academic journal of literature, manages the peer-review of articles submitted for publication. The journal accepts articles focusing on any of three general subject areas: comparative literature, modernist literature, and postcolonial literature.
When an article is submitted, the editor has the article peer-reviewed by exactly three experts, none of whom authored or coauthored the article. The table (see the Reviewers/Authors tab) consists of all the authors or coauthors who have recently submitted articles and all the experts who currently peer-review or have recently peer-reviewed those articles. It also lists the general subject areas for each of the authors and reviewers.
Each author of each submitted article specializes in the general subject area of the article. Moreover, each recently submitted article was peer-reviewed by experts listed in the table.
Review Rules

Suppose that Farkas and Kenyatta were both selected as reviewers for a certain recently submitted article. For each of the following statements, select YesM the statement must be true, based on this supposition and the Information provided. Otherwise, select No.
Answer: ** Explanation:

Explanation

NEW QUESTION # 156**
The use o* bets in the 1998 study was intended to deflect objections that would be based on which of the following Issues?

  • A. The Interpretation of *by some study subjects to include additional Information, and their lack of concentration on the assigned tasks
  • B. The fact that some of the research subjects did not commit the conjunction fallacy
  • C. Failure of research subjects to recognize that adolescent smoking could decrease even when the cigarette tax remains the same
  • D. The possibility of research subjects interpreting "probability" so as not to conform to the mathematical principles, and the lack of motivation of some of the subjects
  • E. The possibility of research subjects interpreting "probability" so as not to conform to the mathematical principles, and their interpretation of Xto include additional information

Answer: B Explanation:
Explanation
Mathematical principles of probability entail that for any future event, the probability that it will occur Is at least as great as the probability that both it and some other given event will occur. Consider, for example, the following statements that were shown to subjects in a 1998 study.
X The percentage of adolescent smokers In Texas will decrease at least 15% from current levels by September
1, 1999.
Y The cigarette tax in Texas will increase by $1.00 per pack in 1999.
Z The cigarette tax in Texas will increase by $1.00 per pack in 1999, and the percentage of adolescent smokers in Texas will decrease at least 15% from current levels by September 1, 1999.
Z("Kand X") could not have been more probable than X. Nevertheless, many of the subjects judged Zto be more probable than X.
This mistaken form of reasoning, displayed with surprising frequency in various studies in addition to the 1998 study, is known as the "conjunction fallacy." A number of researchers have offered alternative explanations for the seeming manifestations of the mistake, thus arguing that the fallacy is less widely committed than the various studies would indicate. Some have claimed that research subjects can take "probability" in a sense that does not conform to the mathematical principles of probability. Detailed descriptions of some such conceptions of "probability" have been developed under the names of "confirmation" and "support." Other researchers would claim, correctly, that subjects shown Z(" Kand X") and