CAT 2021 Slot 3 — VARC Question 4
Direction for Reading Comprehension: The passages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage.
Back in the early 2000s, an awesome thing happened in the New X-Men comics. Our mutant heroes had been battling giant robots called Sentinels for years, but suddenly these mechanical overlords spawned a new threat: Nano-Sentinels! Not content to rule Earth with their metal fists, these tiny robots invaded our bodies at the microscopic level. Infected humans were slowly converted into machines, cell by cell.
Now, a new wave of extremely odd robots is making at least part of the Nano-Sentinels story come true. Using exotic fabrication materials like squishy hydrogels and elastic polymers, researchers are making autonomous devices that are often tiny and that could turn out to be more powerful than an army of Terminators. Some are 1-centimetre blobs that can skate overwater. Others are flat sheets that can roll themselves into tubes, or matchstick-sized plastic coils that act as powerful muscles. No, they won't be invading our bodies and turning us into Sentinels - which I personally find a little disappointing - but some of them could one day swim through our bloodstream to heal us. They could also clean up pollutants in water or fold themselves into different kinds of vehicles for us to drive. . . .
Unlike a traditional robot, which is made of mechanical parts, these new kinds of robots are made from molecular parts. The principle is the same: both are devices that can move around and do things independently. But a robot made from smart materials might be nothing more than a pink drop of hydrogel. Instead of gears and wires, it's assembled from two kinds of molecules - some that love water and some that avoid it - which interact to allow the bot to skate on top of a pond.
Sometimes these materials are used to enhance more conventional robots. One team of researchers, for example, has developed a different kind of hydrogel that becomes sticky when exposed to a low-voltage zap of electricity and then stops being sticky when the electricity is switched off. This putty-like gel can be pasted right onto the feet or wheels of a robot. When the robot wants to climb a sheer wall or scoot across the ceiling, it can activate its sticky feet with a few volts. Once it is back on a flat surface again, the robot turns off the adhesive like a light switch.
Robots that are wholly or partly made of gloop aren't the future that I was promised in science fiction. But it's definitely the future I want. I'm especially keen on the nanometre-scale "soft robots" that could one day swim through our bodies. Metin Sitti, a director at the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems in Germany, worked with colleagues to prototype these tiny, synthetic beasts using various stretchy materials, such as simple rubber, and seeding them with magnetic microparticles. They are assembled into a finished shape by applying magnetic fields. The results look like flowers or geometric shapes made from Tinkertoy ball and stick modelling kits. They're guided through tubes of fluid using magnets, and can even stop and cling to the sides of a tube.
Which one of the following statements best summarises the central point of the passage?
Answer & solution
- A
Robots will use nano-robots on their feet and wheels to climb walls or move on ceilings.
Once the stuff of science fiction, nano-robots now feature in cutting-edge scientific research.
- C
Nano-robots made from molecules that react to water have become increasingly useful.
- D
The field of robotics is likely to be feature more and more in comics like the New X-Men
Easy
The "central point" must cover the whole passage, not one example. The passage opens with a science-fiction reference (Nano-Sentinels), then shows real researchers building tiny molecular robots for healing, cleaning, climbing and more. The main idea is that fiction has become research reality. Eliminate options that are just one detail or that the passage never makes.
Too narrow. Sticky feet for climbing walls and ceilings is only the single example in paragraph 4, not the central theme of the whole passage.
Captures the whole — this is the answer. The passage frames nano-robots as once being comic-book / science-fiction stuff (Nano-Sentinels, Terminators) that is now real "cutting-edge scientific research" (hydrogels, soft robots, Max Planck prototypes). This spans the entire piece.
Too narrow. The water-loving / water-avoiding molecules are just one mechanism (paragraph 3); they are not the central point.
Wrong direction. The passage uses comics to introduce real science; it does not predict that robotics will feature more in comics. That reverses the author's point.
Option B is correct: once the stuff of science fiction, nano-robots now feature in cutting-edge scientific research — the only option that summarises the entire passage.