- Fri Apr 29, 2016 4:53 pm
#23682
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The stimulus concerns a study of adults who suffer from migraines. The participants all experience excessive anxiety during early childhood, then migraines during adolescence, then depression during adulthood. The stimulus concludes that anxiety during childhood is one of the causes of migraine headaches and depression in later life.
The reasoning in the stimulus is very poor. Since you are asked to identify the flaw, you should probably focus on locating choices that describe cause-effect flaws or statistical flaws. This stimulus has far too many flaws in those areas for you to bother being overly specific, but you will need to be careful with your contender choices because of that.
Answer choice (A): This choice might have been attractive, but the relevant flaw is that the stimulus fails to identify the proportion of the population that experience the syndrome relative to the proportion that experience excessive anxiety as a child. This choice misses the point, and is wrong.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus presumes that out of the three events, one of the events (anxiety) is the cause of the other two (migraines and depression). In fact, it is possible that some fourth factor causes all three of those events, but the stimulus fails to consider alternative causes.
Answer choice (C): This choice is incorrect, because the argument's conclusion is altogether consistent with the evidence. The argument is flawed in that it is incomplete, but it does not have an internal contradiction.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus does not need to establish that the migraine sufferers in the study represent all migraine sufferers, because the stimulus merely concludes that anxiety during childhood is one of the causes of migraines and depression later in life. Whether or not these particular migraine sufferers represent others well, this group's cause would still be one of the causes of depression and migraines.
Answer choice (E): The argument does not need to establish why the study was restricted to adult participants. In any case, a careful reading of the stimulus makes the reason clear: the study used adults so that the medical histories of the adults could be used to trace the manifestations of a syndrome, if there was one. Using adolescents and children would have been misguided, unless the study were to go on for a significant number of years.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The stimulus concerns a study of adults who suffer from migraines. The participants all experience excessive anxiety during early childhood, then migraines during adolescence, then depression during adulthood. The stimulus concludes that anxiety during childhood is one of the causes of migraine headaches and depression in later life.
The reasoning in the stimulus is very poor. Since you are asked to identify the flaw, you should probably focus on locating choices that describe cause-effect flaws or statistical flaws. This stimulus has far too many flaws in those areas for you to bother being overly specific, but you will need to be careful with your contender choices because of that.
Answer choice (A): This choice might have been attractive, but the relevant flaw is that the stimulus fails to identify the proportion of the population that experience the syndrome relative to the proportion that experience excessive anxiety as a child. This choice misses the point, and is wrong.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus presumes that out of the three events, one of the events (anxiety) is the cause of the other two (migraines and depression). In fact, it is possible that some fourth factor causes all three of those events, but the stimulus fails to consider alternative causes.
Answer choice (C): This choice is incorrect, because the argument's conclusion is altogether consistent with the evidence. The argument is flawed in that it is incomplete, but it does not have an internal contradiction.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus does not need to establish that the migraine sufferers in the study represent all migraine sufferers, because the stimulus merely concludes that anxiety during childhood is one of the causes of migraines and depression later in life. Whether or not these particular migraine sufferers represent others well, this group's cause would still be one of the causes of depression and migraines.
Answer choice (E): The argument does not need to establish why the study was restricted to adult participants. In any case, a careful reading of the stimulus makes the reason clear: the study used adults so that the medical histories of the adults could be used to trace the manifestations of a syndrome, if there was one. Using adolescents and children would have been misguided, unless the study were to go on for a significant number of years.