laurat wrote:I was wavering between A and B and chose B. My prephrase anticipated that losing weight doesn't necessarily mean that body fat is lessened, which I thought B outlined perfectly. A to me seems to question the study but doesn't seem nearly as strong as B. I was positive I had gotten this question right-can you help?
(PT-52-61 p 138)
Here's one way to distinguish between (A) and (B):
The study described in the prompt that led to weight loss involved a diet that was BOTH high in protein AND low in carbs. But (B) only talks about eating high amounts of protein, nothing about carbs. (B) could presumably refer to people who eat lots of carbs AND lots of protein -- it wouldn't be much of a surprise if that group of folks gained body fat. In any case, it does nothing to weaken the study's conclusion that eating lots of protein (and few carbs) leads to a loss in body fat.
By contrast, (A) does weaken the study's conclusion because it (1) refers directly to one of the groups in the study (low-protein; high-carbs) and (2) provides a reason why Group A could have lost more pounds, but Group B could have lost more body fat.
So, to be clear, what's referred to in (A) could (hypothetically) look like this:
Group A: lost an average of 20 pounds, consisting of 10 pounds lost water and 10 pounds lost body fat.
Group B: lost an average of 15 pounds, consisting of 15 pounds lost body fat.
Under this (hypothetical) study result, which is what is described in (A), Group B lost more bodyfat even though they lost less weight overall.
Hope this makes sense -- good luck!
Athena Dalton