- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#35307
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (C)
In this case, a computer program and a very experienced, highly skilled cardiologist are compared on
the basis of the quality of their diagnoses. The computer was significantly better at true heart attack
diagnoses, which by extension means that the cardiologist under-diagnosed a number of actual heart
attacks. While this is an important metric (since underdiagnosing might result in inadequate care), it
is not the only measure of quality. It is also important to avoid over-diagnosing, since concluding that
someone is suffering a heart attack incorrectly could result in expensive treatments, hospital stays,
or even dangerous surgeries. A good diagnostician avoids both over- and under-diagnosis, which the
argument does not address.
Answer choice (A): If it is true that the cardiologist did not make obvious mistakes but still underdiagnosed,
then there is little reason to believe that another cardiologist would perform better. (A)
supports that conclusion that interpreting EKG data should be left to computer programs.
Answer choice (B): Determining if a patient has had a heart attack is not subjective—it either
happened or it did not. The data may be difficult to interpret and experts may even disagree over
what the data suggest, but that does not mean the judgment is subjective, only challenging. (B) does
not weaken the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. For the reasons suggested above, it is
important to avoid over-diagnosis, as well as under-diagnosis. If (C) is true, then the computer
program was more likely to diagnose heart attacks which did not occur than the cardiologist. Thus,
both the computer program and the cardiologist have weaknesses in interpreting EKG data, but it
would be unwise to leave interpreting entirely to computer programs.
Answer choice (D): Suggesting that both the computer program and cardiologist failed to diagnose
a considerable percentage of cases does not outweigh the fact that the cardiologist was significantly
more likely to under-diagnose than the computer program. So, in some cases, neither solution is
adequate, and in the remaining cases, the computer is superior. This suggests that interpreting EKG
data should be left to computer programs.
Answer choice (E): We are told in the stimulus that the cardiologist was highly skilled and very
experienced. If (E) is true and other cardiologists are unlikely to be as skilled or experienced, then
it is probable that they would perform even worse than this cardiologist did. Thus, the author’s
argument is strengthened, not weakened, by this answer choice.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (C)
In this case, a computer program and a very experienced, highly skilled cardiologist are compared on
the basis of the quality of their diagnoses. The computer was significantly better at true heart attack
diagnoses, which by extension means that the cardiologist under-diagnosed a number of actual heart
attacks. While this is an important metric (since underdiagnosing might result in inadequate care), it
is not the only measure of quality. It is also important to avoid over-diagnosing, since concluding that
someone is suffering a heart attack incorrectly could result in expensive treatments, hospital stays,
or even dangerous surgeries. A good diagnostician avoids both over- and under-diagnosis, which the
argument does not address.
Answer choice (A): If it is true that the cardiologist did not make obvious mistakes but still underdiagnosed,
then there is little reason to believe that another cardiologist would perform better. (A)
supports that conclusion that interpreting EKG data should be left to computer programs.
Answer choice (B): Determining if a patient has had a heart attack is not subjective—it either
happened or it did not. The data may be difficult to interpret and experts may even disagree over
what the data suggest, but that does not mean the judgment is subjective, only challenging. (B) does
not weaken the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. For the reasons suggested above, it is
important to avoid over-diagnosis, as well as under-diagnosis. If (C) is true, then the computer
program was more likely to diagnose heart attacks which did not occur than the cardiologist. Thus,
both the computer program and the cardiologist have weaknesses in interpreting EKG data, but it
would be unwise to leave interpreting entirely to computer programs.
Answer choice (D): Suggesting that both the computer program and cardiologist failed to diagnose
a considerable percentage of cases does not outweigh the fact that the cardiologist was significantly
more likely to under-diagnose than the computer program. So, in some cases, neither solution is
adequate, and in the remaining cases, the computer is superior. This suggests that interpreting EKG
data should be left to computer programs.
Answer choice (E): We are told in the stimulus that the cardiologist was highly skilled and very
experienced. If (E) is true and other cardiologists are unlikely to be as skilled or experienced, then
it is probable that they would perform even worse than this cardiologist did. Thus, the author’s
argument is strengthened, not weakened, by this answer choice.