Hi,
The argument is structured as follows:
Premise: Clinical depression correlates with decreased left lobe activity, whereas lack of depression correlates with increased left lobe activity.
Conclusion: Frontal lobe activity affects one's general disposition
Frontal lobe activity (cause) General disposition (effect)
This is a typical Causal flaw in the reasoning: correlations merely support the presence of causal relationships; they do not prove that such relationships actually exist. To weaken this argument, we can come up with a third, independent factor (X), which causes both of the correlated phenomena to occur simultaneously. Answer choice (D) does that, and is therefore incorrect.
Alternatively, we can come up with evidence suggesting that the causal relationship is reversed. Answer choice (E) suggests that it may be: if social interactions of the type not engaged in by clinically depressed people stimulate left lobe activity, then the increased left lobe activity of those not suffering from clinical depression may be the effect - not the cause - of these people's general disposition:
Answer choice (E):
No depression Social Interaction Increased left lobe activity
On a related note, had answer choice (A) stated that the drugs prescribed to combat depression
decrease left lobe activity, then answer choice (A) would have had the same exact effect on the argument as answer choice (E). Do you see why?