Looking at the image, we are presented with a grid of 18 X-ray images of various animals, grouped into three columns labeled “SET A”, “SET B”, and “SET C”. The top banner reads: “VETSETS 6 X-RAYS 150X105MM”.
The task appears to be to
identify which set (A, B, or C) is different from the other two, based on a consistent pattern or rule.
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Step-by-step Analysis:
Let’s examine each set individually.
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## 🔍 SET A (Left Column — 6 images)
Images in Set A:
1. Armadillo (or similar armored mammal)
2. Snake
3. Dog (lateral view)
4. Bird (possibly a parrot or small bird)
5. Turtle (dorsal view)
6. Lizard (dorsal view)
✔ Observation: All animals in Set A are
vertebrates (have backbones), but more importantly — they are all
whole-body X-rays showing the full skeleton or major body structure.
They are also mostly
terrestrial or semi-aquatic vertebrates — mammals, reptiles, birds, amphibians.
But let’s look for a more specific pattern.
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## 🔍 SET B (Middle Column — 6 images)
Images in Set B:
1. Frog (lateral view)
2. Bird (possibly a raptor or owl — leg detail)
3. Bird (close-up of wing/shoulder joint)
4. Cat or dog (abdominal region — internal organs visible, not just skeleton)
5. Hand/paw (extreme close-up — possibly primate or canine digits)
6. Bird leg (tarsometatarsus and toes — very detailed limb shot)
✔ Observation: These are
NOT whole-body X-rays. Most are
close-ups or partial views — limbs, paws, joints, internal organs. They focus on
specific anatomical regions, not the entire animal.
This is a key difference.
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## 🔍 SET C (Right Column — 6 images)
Images in Set C:
1. Rat or mouse (ventral view)
2. Bird (skeleton — full body)
3. Frog (dorsal view)
4. Lizard (lateral view)
5. Frog (another angle)
6. Rabbit or hare (lateral view)
✔ Observation: Like Set A, these are
whole-body X-rays of complete animals. Even the bird shows the full skeleton.
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## 🧠 Pattern Recognition:
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Set A: Whole-body X-rays of various vertebrates.
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Set B: Close-up or partial X-rays — focusing on limbs, joints, organs, not whole animals.
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Set C: Whole-body X-rays of various vertebrates.
→ So
Set B is the odd one out.
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##
✔ Final Answer:
>
SET B is the different set.
💡 Explanation:
Sets A and C both contain
whole-body X-ray images of complete animals (mammals, reptiles, amphibians, birds). In contrast,
Set B contains partial or close-up X-rays — such as limbs, paws, joints, or internal organs — rather than full-body views. This makes Set B distinct from the other two sets.
This is likely the intended logical grouping — distinguishing between
full-body vs.局部 (partial) radiographs.
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📌 Note: The header “VETSETS 6 X-RAYS” might imply that each set represents a “vet set” of 6 X-rays, and the task is to find which set doesn’t follow the same category — which again points to Set B being the outlier.
✔ Answer: SET B
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable pet x rays.