- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22790
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
This stimulus cites a causal hypothesis advanced by researchers after a recent study: among several hundred female physicians, the more folate and B6 each participant consumed, the less likely she was to develop coronary disease. Based on these results, researchers concluded that folate and B6 vitamins help to block heart disease in women.
This is a causal conclusion, followed by a weaken question. If an answer provides other possible causes of the study results, that choice will likely be the correct answer.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The study showed a lower rate of coronary disease among those who consumed folate and B6, but if those same foods contained other ingredients known to inhibit heart disease, then that provides a viable alternative cause of the research results.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus makes no reference to men, so this choice would not refute the causal argument in the stimulus, nor weaken any part of the argument.
Answer choice (C): Knowledge of the link between diet and health would not affect the strength of the argument in the stimulus, because all of the participants were doctors, creating a “level playing field” with regard to this knowledge (that is, all of the participants were exposed to this same information).
Answer choice (D): Like incorrect answer choice (C) above, this choice makes no distinction discussed in the stimulus; none of the physicians were screened in advance, so this choice does not distinguish between the participants who consumed more folate and B6 and those who consumed less, or those who were more likely to develop coronary disease and those who were less likely.
Answer choice (E): Regardless of the quantities of folate and B6 present in most foods, the results of the study reflected a correlation, based upon which the researchers drew a causal conclusion. This choice does not weaken the causal argument from the stimulus, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
This stimulus cites a causal hypothesis advanced by researchers after a recent study: among several hundred female physicians, the more folate and B6 each participant consumed, the less likely she was to develop coronary disease. Based on these results, researchers concluded that folate and B6 vitamins help to block heart disease in women.
This is a causal conclusion, followed by a weaken question. If an answer provides other possible causes of the study results, that choice will likely be the correct answer.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The study showed a lower rate of coronary disease among those who consumed folate and B6, but if those same foods contained other ingredients known to inhibit heart disease, then that provides a viable alternative cause of the research results.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus makes no reference to men, so this choice would not refute the causal argument in the stimulus, nor weaken any part of the argument.
Answer choice (C): Knowledge of the link between diet and health would not affect the strength of the argument in the stimulus, because all of the participants were doctors, creating a “level playing field” with regard to this knowledge (that is, all of the participants were exposed to this same information).
Answer choice (D): Like incorrect answer choice (C) above, this choice makes no distinction discussed in the stimulus; none of the physicians were screened in advance, so this choice does not distinguish between the participants who consumed more folate and B6 and those who consumed less, or those who were more likely to develop coronary disease and those who were less likely.
Answer choice (E): Regardless of the quantities of folate and B6 present in most foods, the results of the study reflected a correlation, based upon which the researchers drew a causal conclusion. This choice does not weaken the causal argument from the stimulus, so this answer choice is incorrect.