XAT 2015VARC Question 23

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Analyse the passage given and provide an appropriate answer for the questions that follow.

Certain variants of key behavioural genes, “risk allele” make people more vulnerable to certain mood, psychiatric, or personality disorders. An allele is any of the variants of a gene that takes more than one form. A risk allele, then, is simply a gene variant that increases your likelihood of developing a problem.

Researchers have identified a dozen-odd gene variants that can increase a person’s susceptibility to depression, anxiety and antisocial, sociopathic, or violent behaviours, and other problems – if, and only if, the person carrying the variant suffers a traumatic or stressful childhood or faces particularly trying experiences later in life. This hypothesis, often called the “stress diathesis” or “genetic vulnerability” model, has come to saturate psychiatry and behavioural science.

Recently, however, an alternate hypothesis has emerged from this one and is turning it inside out. This new model suggests that it’s a mistake to understand these “risk” genes only as liabilities. According to this new thinking, these “bad genes” can create dysfunctions in unfavourable contexts – but they can also enhance function in favourable contexts. The genetic sensitivities to negative experience that the vulnerability hypothesis has identified, it follows, are just the downside of a bigger phenomenon: a heightened genetic sensitivity to all experience.

This hypothesis has been anticipated by Swedish folk wisdom which has long spoken of “dandelion” children. These dandelion children – equivalent to our “normal” or “healthy” children, with “resilient” genes – do pretty well almost anywhere, whether raised in the equivalent of a sidewalk crack or well-tended garden. There are also “orchid” children, who will wilt if ignored or maltreated but bloom spectacularly with greenhouse care. According to this orchid hypothesis, risk becomes possibility; vulnerability becomes plasticity and responsiveness. Gene variants generally considered misfortunes can instead now be understood as highly leveraged evolutionary bets, with both high risks and high potential rewards.

In this view, having both dandelion and orchid kids greatly raises a family’s (and a species’) chance of succeeding, over time and in any given environment. The behavioural diversity provided by these two different types of temperament also supplies precisely what a smart, strong species needs if it is to spread across and dominate a changing world. The many dandelions in a population provide an underlying stability. The less-numerous orchids, meanwhile, may falter in some environments but can excel in those that suit them. And even when they lead troubled early lives, some of the resulting heightened responses to adversity that can be problematic in everyday life – increased novelty-seeking, restlessness of attention, elevated risk-taking, or aggression–can prove advantageous in certain challenging situations: wars, social strife of many kinds, and migrations to new environments. Together, the steady dandelions and the mercurial orchids offer an adaptive flexibility that neither can provide alone. Together, they open a path to otherwise unreachable individual and collective achievements.

Mr. Good and Mr. Evil were batch-mates during the college. Five years after graduating, Mr. Evil was put behind bars for financial fraud while Mr. Good was running a successful NGO, working for orphans. Mr. Good was raised in a protective environment while Mr. Evil was a self-made man. Based on the above information, which of the following statements is definitely correct ?

Answer & solution

  • A

    It can be concluded that Mr. Evil is a ‘dandelion,’ but nothing can be conclude about Mr. Good.

  • B

    It can be concluded that Mr. Evil is an ‘orchid’, but nothing can be concluded about Mr. Good.

  • C

    It can be concluded that Mr. Good is a ‘dandelion’, but nothing can be concluded about Mr. Evil.

  • D

    It can be concluded that both Mr. Good and Mr. Evil are ‘orchid’.

  • It is not possible to conclude about ‘children typology’ of the two batch mates.

Solution

The passage describes a “dandelion” as someone who would thrive irrespective of the kind of upbringing he gets, and an “orchid” as someone who would wane easily if not given proper care and attention, but would thrive in suitable conditions. Besides this, the passage also mentions that genes play a role in determining children typology. Genes and environment therefore play a combined role in deciding whether a person is normal or not.
The question only mentions the environments in which both individuals have been brought up. Genes have not been brought into the picture at all. Therefore, we cannot draw any conclusion as to whether the two individuals are orchids or dandelions.
Hence, the correct answer is option 5.

XAT 2015 VARC Q23: Mr. Good and Mr. Evil were batch-mates during the college. Five years after graduating, Mr. Evil was put behin — Solution | TheCATExam