Hopefully, this makes some sense. Keep in mind, I am using the term math very loosely.
Basically, I am wondering if anyone is aware of a resource that gets into numbers/maths issues in LR. Some examples would be percentages versus numbers [fairly frequent], greater than or equal to vs. less than, etc. One I saw recently was that the stimulus establishes that revenues were equal to fees and other revenues. If costs exceed the sum both [A>B+C], costs must be greater than either individual component. Now, I get that it is relatively obvious math, but, when doing LR questions, these kind of make me fumble more than they should. I am trying to find any resources that sort of do an overview of frequent math/number related issues on LR.
Comments
The best way would be to try as many LR questions as possible and you are bound to encounter some of these kind of questions. In such cases, BR the hell out of them and you will find that by doing so, your mind will open up to these concepts.
Like you, math tends to trip me up. Luckily, the number/math related problems in LR are very similar to each other (e.g. whole number v. percentage, two different uses for most applied to two different number categories). While these stalled my time in the past, the number/math related problems are refreshing to see, because of how frequently they rely on a very small set of problem/flaw types. As already suggested, running across them and BRing them will help tremendously. Even if you don't explicitly pin down what these questions are doing (you should), you will likely pick up the similarities implicitly. Like Logic Games, these LR questions are more mechanical than they seem.
But yeah, if you see enough of them they basically all test the same thing. Just remember that percentage and actually quantities have a very loose relationship. Without having to think about it, we’d all choose 1% of $1,000,000,000 over 50% $1,000. What they do is leave out the numbers the percentages are taking from and hope that we fall for the 50%. They repackage this same thing in different ways so you just have to learn how to recognize it.