- Fri Sep 13, 2019 6:01 pm
#68114
Hi Ibarrajo,
The issue in the stimulus is that it makes a bizarre assumption that the root cause of the improvement isn't the laughter itself, but rather the tendency to laugh, so the amount one actually laughs isn't relevant. The more obvious and reasonable causal explanation would be:
Greater tendency to laugh causes More Laughter at Comic Videos causes More Improvement
With the assumption being made that those with a greater tendency to laugh actually did laugh more at the videos. This type of flaw question with a causal stimulus is basically asking for a more reasonable causal assumption than the one made in the stimulus.
Hope this helps!
The issue in the stimulus is that it makes a bizarre assumption that the root cause of the improvement isn't the laughter itself, but rather the tendency to laugh, so the amount one actually laughs isn't relevant. The more obvious and reasonable causal explanation would be:
Greater tendency to laugh causes More Laughter at Comic Videos causes More Improvement
With the assumption being made that those with a greater tendency to laugh actually did laugh more at the videos. This type of flaw question with a causal stimulus is basically asking for a more reasonable causal assumption than the one made in the stimulus.
Hope this helps!