- Mon Jul 22, 2019 11:50 am
#66759
Hi Taylor,
When we have a specific scientific reference for which there isn't any "common sense" outside knowledge that can be brought in, we have to use only the information in the stimulus as a guide. Here, we know we have a large study (1k people) over a 12-year period; the ones with more lycopene in their system are less likely to suffer a stroke. From that, we can make a likely inference that at least some of these thousand people are regularly eating the fruits and vegetables that are high in lycopene, as we know of no other way for a human to obtain it.
The main takeaway is to keep your eyes on the prize; this is a weaken question, with a causal conclusion, so we should be looking for answer choices that weaken causal conclusions: alternate causes, cause without effect (or vice versa), mere correlation, reverse causation. Here, (A) immediately give us an alternate cause, making it the correct answer choice.
Hope this clears things up!