- Wed Feb 25, 2015 12:00 am
#34762
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
The scientific/medical subject matter of this stimulus is intended to distract you from the argument,
which otherwise is not too complicated. The author starts out by telling us about a recent study that
establishes a correlation between “continued deterioration of the nerve cells in the brains” of stroke
patients and the “highest levels of the protein glutamate in the blood” of those patients. To provide us
with some background information, the author explains that glutamate is a neurotransmitter and can
kill oxygen-starved cells. Based on this correlation, the author concludes that it is glutamate “leaking
from damaged or oxygen-starved cells” that is “a cause of long-term brain damage resulting from
strokes.”
This is a Strengthen question, and a readily apparent issue from the stimulus is the argument’s causal
inference from evidence of a correlation. However, the inclusion of the indefinite article “a” in the
conclusion, i.e., “a cause,” shifts our prephrase away from the standard correlation-to-causation
focus of many causal Strengthen and Weaken questions. While it is still flawed to conclude that the
correlation proves any causation at all, this conclusion is not as weak as a more definitively causal
conclusion indicating that the cause mentioned in the conclusion is definitively the only cause.
Instead, our prephrase will focus on the unsupported transition made in the argument from the
evidence provided in the first sentence to the conclusion: the addition of the origin of the glutamate
being leaked “from damaged or oxygen-starved nerve cells.” We know from the second sentence that
glutamate can leak from such cells, but there is no indication here that the glutamate found in the
patients’ blood came from “damaged or oxygen-starved cells.” The unsupported identification of the
source of the glutamate found in the patients’ blood gives us a superior prephrase that can help us
blast through these answer choices.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because we do not know whether the patients at
issue have any “damaged or oxygen-starved cells” in their bodies.
Answer choice (B): Here, the information has no effect on the conclusion, because we do not know
what is meant in this context by “abnormal,” and we do not know what would be the effect of these
abnormal levels on the brains of stroke victims.
Answer choice (C): Even if glutamate is the only neurotransmitter to leak from such cells, that
information does not strengthen the conclusion because we do not know if there are any “damaged or
oxygen-starved nerve cells” in these patients.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice because it fixes a flaw in the argument’s
conclusion, the identification of the source of the glutamate in the patients’ blood. This answer
choice states definitively that “damaged or oxygen-starved nerve cells” are the only source of
glutamate in the blood.
Answer choice (E): As with answer choices (A) and (C), this information does not strengthen the
conclusion because we do not know whether the patients have any such cells in their bodies.
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
The scientific/medical subject matter of this stimulus is intended to distract you from the argument,
which otherwise is not too complicated. The author starts out by telling us about a recent study that
establishes a correlation between “continued deterioration of the nerve cells in the brains” of stroke
patients and the “highest levels of the protein glutamate in the blood” of those patients. To provide us
with some background information, the author explains that glutamate is a neurotransmitter and can
kill oxygen-starved cells. Based on this correlation, the author concludes that it is glutamate “leaking
from damaged or oxygen-starved cells” that is “a cause of long-term brain damage resulting from
strokes.”
This is a Strengthen question, and a readily apparent issue from the stimulus is the argument’s causal
inference from evidence of a correlation. However, the inclusion of the indefinite article “a” in the
conclusion, i.e., “a cause,” shifts our prephrase away from the standard correlation-to-causation
focus of many causal Strengthen and Weaken questions. While it is still flawed to conclude that the
correlation proves any causation at all, this conclusion is not as weak as a more definitively causal
conclusion indicating that the cause mentioned in the conclusion is definitively the only cause.
Instead, our prephrase will focus on the unsupported transition made in the argument from the
evidence provided in the first sentence to the conclusion: the addition of the origin of the glutamate
being leaked “from damaged or oxygen-starved nerve cells.” We know from the second sentence that
glutamate can leak from such cells, but there is no indication here that the glutamate found in the
patients’ blood came from “damaged or oxygen-starved cells.” The unsupported identification of the
source of the glutamate found in the patients’ blood gives us a superior prephrase that can help us
blast through these answer choices.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because we do not know whether the patients at
issue have any “damaged or oxygen-starved cells” in their bodies.
Answer choice (B): Here, the information has no effect on the conclusion, because we do not know
what is meant in this context by “abnormal,” and we do not know what would be the effect of these
abnormal levels on the brains of stroke victims.
Answer choice (C): Even if glutamate is the only neurotransmitter to leak from such cells, that
information does not strengthen the conclusion because we do not know if there are any “damaged or
oxygen-starved nerve cells” in these patients.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice because it fixes a flaw in the argument’s
conclusion, the identification of the source of the glutamate in the patients’ blood. This answer
choice states definitively that “damaged or oxygen-starved nerve cells” are the only source of
glutamate in the blood.
Answer choice (E): As with answer choices (A) and (C), this information does not strengthen the
conclusion because we do not know whether the patients have any such cells in their bodies.