CAT 2024 Slot 2VARC Question 14

Para CompletionEasy
Passage / Data

The passage below is accompanied by four questions. Based on the passage, choose the best answer for each question.

The job of a peer reviewer is thankless. Collectively, academics spend around 70 million hours every year evaluating each other’s manuscripts on the behalf of scholarly journals — and they usually receive no monetary compensation and little if any recognition for their effort. Some do it as a way to keep abreast with developments in their field; some simply see it as a duty to the discipline. Either way, academic publishing would likely crumble without them.

In recent years, some scientists have begun posting their reviews online, mainly to claim credit for their work. Sites like Publons allow researchers to either share entire referee reports or simply list the journals for whom they’ve carried out a review…. The rise of Publons suggests that academics are increasingly placing value on the work of peer review and asking others, such as grant funders, to do the same. While that’s vital in the publish-or-perish culture of academia, there’s also immense value in the data underlying peer review. Sharing peer review data could help journals stamp out fraud, inefficiency, and systemic bias in academic publishing.….

Peer review data could also help root out bias. Last year, a study based on peer review data for nearly 24,000 submissions to the biomedical journal eLife found that women and non Westerners were vastly underrepresented among peer reviewers. Only around one in every five reviewers was female, and less than two percent of reviewers were based in developing countries…. Openly publishing peer review data could perhaps also help journals address another problem in academic publishing: fraudulent peer reviews. For instance, a minority of authors have been known to use phony email addresses to pose as an outside expert and review their own manuscripts.…

Opponents of open peer review commonly argue that confidentiality is vital to the integrity of the review process; referees may be less critical of manuscripts if their reports are published, especially if they are revealing their identities by signing them. Some also hold concerns that open reviewing may deter referees from agreeing to judge manuscripts in the first place, or that they’ll take longer to do so out of fear of scrutiny…. Even when the content of reviews and the identity of reviewers can’t be shared publicly, perhaps journals could share the data with outside researchers for study. Or they could release other figures that wouldn’t compromise the anonymity of reviews but that might answer important questions about how long the reviewing process takes, how many researchers editors have to reach out to on average to find one who will carry out the work, and the geographic distribution of peer reviewers.

Of course, opening up data underlying the reviewing process will not fix peer review entirely, and there may be instances in which there are valid reasons to keep the content of peer reviews hidden and the identity of the referees confidential. But the norm should shift from opacity in all cases to opacity only when necessary.

There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and decide where (option 1, 2, 3, or 4) the following sentence would best fit.

Sentence: Science has officially crowned us superior to our early-rising brethren.

Paragraph: My fellow night owls, grab a strong cup of coffee and gather around: I have great news. ___(1)___. For a long time, our kind has been unfairly maligned. Stereotyped as lazy and undisciplined. Told we ought to be morning larks. Advised to go to bed early so we can wake before 5am and run a marathon before breakfast like all high-flyers seem to do. Now, however, we are having the last laugh. ___(2)___. It may be a tad more complicated than that. A study published last week, which you may have already seen while scrolling at 1am, suggests that staying up late could be good for brain power. ___(3)___. Is this study a thinly veiled PR exercise conducted by a caffeine-pill company? Nope, it’s legit. ___(4)___. Research led by academics at Imperial College London studied data on more than 26,000 people and found that “self-declared ‘night owls’ generally tend to have higher cognitive scores”.

Answer & solution

  • A

    Option 1

  • B

    Option 4

  • C

    Option 3

  • Option 2

Solution

Easy

Place the sentence "Science has officially crowned us superior to our early-rising brethren." Find the blank where it answers what precedes and is elaborated by what follows. It is a triumphant, science-based claim of night-owl superiority.

1

Test the blanks. Blank (1) follows "I have great news" - but immediately after, the text complains night owls have long been "unfairly maligned," recapping past grievance, not yet announcing the science. Blank (2) follows "Now, however, we are having the last laugh," and is immediately followed by "It may be a tad more complicated than that." The inserted sentence is the bold claim ("Science has officially crowned us superior") that the next line gently qualifies with "It may be a tad more complicated than that." This cause-and-walk-back flow fits blank (2) perfectly.

2

Confirm by elimination. Blank (3) precedes a skeptical aside ("Is this study a PR exercise?") and (4) precedes the concrete Imperial College finding - neither needs the broad "crowned us superior" claim, which belongs right after "last laugh." So the sentence best fits Option 2.

Option 2 - the triumphant "Science has officially crowned us superior" sits after "having the last laugh" and is softened by the following "It may be a tad more complicated than that."

CAT 2024 Slot 2 VARC Q14: There is a sentence that is missing in the paragraph below. Look at the paragraph and decide where (option 1, — Solution | TheCATExam