- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#24804
Complete Question Explanation
Evaluate the Argument. The correct answer choice is (E)
The stimulus describes a scientist's observations. First, in temperate zones, food is more plentiful in the ocean than in fresh water. Second, temperate zone migratory fish spawn in fresh water and mature in the ocean. Third, migratory fish need more food as they mature. On the basis of these observations, the scientist hypothesizes that migratory fish migrate (from fresh water to ocean, or vice versa) to get more food as they mature. Then the scientist observes that in the tropics, migratory fish spawn in the ocean and mature in fresh water (reverse of temperate migratory fish). This would seem to discredit his hypothesis, right?
Clearly, unless in the tropics, food is more plentiful in fresh water than in the ocean, which would explain why tropical fish migrate from ocean to fresh water as they mature. So in order to tell if the hypothesis holds, we need to know the distribution of food in the tropics (our pre-phrase). Namely, in the tropics, is the distribution of food reversed?
This is an evaluate question; in this case, we are evaluating the scientist's hypothesis, namely, whether it holds. The answer choices present a list of questions: answering that question one way would discredit the hypothesis; answering the opposite way would do the opposite. Answering yes to our pre-phrase would validate the hypothesis and explain the subsequent reverse behavior of tropical fish vis a vis temperate fish. Answering no would discredit it.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect. Temperatures are irrelevant to the scientist's hypothesis, and no matter what the temperatures are in the temperate zones, the hypothesis is unaffected. As such, it would neither validate nor discredit the hypothesis. The key to the hypothesis is the distribution of food.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect. Yes, it talks about food, but this is a red herring (no pun intended). The problem here is that it does not mention the distribution of food between ocean and fresh water.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is incorrect because it does not mention food or the distribution thereof.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is incorrect. Like (C), the information about the distribution of species is irrelevant to the hypothesis.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice because it matches our pre-phrase, explained above why it is right.
Evaluate the Argument. The correct answer choice is (E)
The stimulus describes a scientist's observations. First, in temperate zones, food is more plentiful in the ocean than in fresh water. Second, temperate zone migratory fish spawn in fresh water and mature in the ocean. Third, migratory fish need more food as they mature. On the basis of these observations, the scientist hypothesizes that migratory fish migrate (from fresh water to ocean, or vice versa) to get more food as they mature. Then the scientist observes that in the tropics, migratory fish spawn in the ocean and mature in fresh water (reverse of temperate migratory fish). This would seem to discredit his hypothesis, right?
Clearly, unless in the tropics, food is more plentiful in fresh water than in the ocean, which would explain why tropical fish migrate from ocean to fresh water as they mature. So in order to tell if the hypothesis holds, we need to know the distribution of food in the tropics (our pre-phrase). Namely, in the tropics, is the distribution of food reversed?
This is an evaluate question; in this case, we are evaluating the scientist's hypothesis, namely, whether it holds. The answer choices present a list of questions: answering that question one way would discredit the hypothesis; answering the opposite way would do the opposite. Answering yes to our pre-phrase would validate the hypothesis and explain the subsequent reverse behavior of tropical fish vis a vis temperate fish. Answering no would discredit it.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect. Temperatures are irrelevant to the scientist's hypothesis, and no matter what the temperatures are in the temperate zones, the hypothesis is unaffected. As such, it would neither validate nor discredit the hypothesis. The key to the hypothesis is the distribution of food.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect. Yes, it talks about food, but this is a red herring (no pun intended). The problem here is that it does not mention the distribution of food between ocean and fresh water.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is incorrect because it does not mention food or the distribution thereof.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is incorrect. Like (C), the information about the distribution of species is irrelevant to the hypothesis.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice because it matches our pre-phrase, explained above why it is right.