Future research Β·Identifying additional organic compounds that can bind to additional semiconductor mateirals
Passage Style
Problem-analysis
Single position
21.
The passage most strongly supports βββββ βββ ββ βββ ββββββββββ
Question Type
Implied
We canβt predict this one. We should use POE on the answer choices, keeping in mind the authorβs main point: thanks to Belcher and Hu, promising progress is being made on using peptides to help create new kinds of super-small transistors.
a
Some peptides that ββββ ββ βββββββ ββββββββ ββββ ββββ ββ ββββββ ββββββββββ
Unsupported. We know that Belcher and Hu are working on peptides that bind to two different semiconductor crystals at once. But we donβt know whether those are one gallium arsenide crystal and one indium phosphide crystal. Maybe theyβre two gallium arsenide crystals.
Unsupported. We know that some researchers are looking at using DNA to assembly nanocircuits. But the only peptide researchers we know about are Belcher and Hu.
Supported. Belcher and Hu have been trying to get peptides to bind to 20 more semiconductor materials, and theyβve had some success.
e
Peptides have been ββββ ββ ββββββββββ ββββββββββββ ββββ βββ βββ βββββββ ββ βββββββββββββββ
Unsupported. The authorβs only interested in the use of peptides for semiconductors. He simply doesnβt address whether theyβve been used in other applications.
Difficulty
64% of people who answer get this correct
This is a moderately difficult question.
It is similar in difficulty to other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%138
152
75%166
Analysis
Implied
Problem-analysis
Science
Single position
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
11%
157
b
10%
156
c
3%
155
d
64%
161
e
13%
156
Question history
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