- Tue Oct 31, 2017 10:25 pm
#41083
Hi!
I was a bit confused when I read the stimulus the first time around. How can the result be surprising if the ingredients in them are known to contribute to heart disease?
I selected answer choice (E) for this question and eliminated the other answer choices for the following reasons:
Answer choice (A): We would have to make the added assumption that people smoke more often because smoking low-yield cigarettes has become fashionable. I eliminated this AC because of the additional work required for this to be true.
Answer choice (B): This AC is more broad; it discusses smokers in general. The stimulus is concerned about those who switch to low-yield cigarettes and the surprising result that it has not led to reduced incidence of heart attacks.
Answer choice (C) and (D): Like answer choice (B), these ACs do not tells us why low-yield cigarettes has not reduced incidences of heart attacks.
Answer choice (E): This AC discusses people that switched from high-yield cigarettes to low-yield cigarettes and addresses how heart attacks/heart disease has not been reduced, despite the switch: these individuals increase the number and depth of puffs so they can maintain the level of nicotine they are accustomed to.
I was a bit confused when I read the stimulus the first time around. How can the result be surprising if the ingredients in them are known to contribute to heart disease?
I selected answer choice (E) for this question and eliminated the other answer choices for the following reasons:
Answer choice (A): We would have to make the added assumption that people smoke more often because smoking low-yield cigarettes has become fashionable. I eliminated this AC because of the additional work required for this to be true.
Answer choice (B): This AC is more broad; it discusses smokers in general. The stimulus is concerned about those who switch to low-yield cigarettes and the surprising result that it has not led to reduced incidence of heart attacks.
Answer choice (C) and (D): Like answer choice (B), these ACs do not tells us why low-yield cigarettes has not reduced incidences of heart attacks.
Answer choice (E): This AC discusses people that switched from high-yield cigarettes to low-yield cigarettes and addresses how heart attacks/heart disease has not been reduced, despite the switch: these individuals increase the number and depth of puffs so they can maintain the level of nicotine they are accustomed to.