- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#72944
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (E).
In this stimulus we are told that chicks treated to reduce salmonella end up a week later with more of some kind of bacteria than untreated chicks. We are asked to help explain the situation. As with most Resolve questions, we should be thinking about what caused this situation to occur. Our prephrase should be about the treatment somehow causing the difference in bacteria levels, since the treatment came before the difference in the two groups showed up.
Answer choice (A): You may be drawn to this answer, thinking that the bacteria is around because the treatment hasn't begun to take effect yet, but this is a trap. The delayed time to administer the treatment actually tells us nothing about what happens AFTER the treatment is administered, or why treated chicks have higher levels than untreated ones.
Answer choice (B): There is nothing in this answer that gives us the cause of the higher levels of bacteria only in the treated chicks.
Answer choice (C): While this is good news for chicks trying to stay healthy, it gives us no cause for, or explanation of, the higher level of bacteria in treated chicks relative to untreated chicks.
Answer choice (D): This answer appears in some ways to make the paradox even more confusing. Untreated chicks have less bacteria than treated ones, but still get sick more often than the treated ones? As this potentially adds more confusion, and does not provide a cause or other explanation for the difference in the groups, it is a loser.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Here we have our causal explanation, although you may find it to be subtle. If this answer is true (and the stem says we are to treat it as if it is), then the salmonella was causing lower levels of bacteria prior to the treatment. Once the salmonella was killed off in the treated chicks, the previously inhibited bacteria had a chance to start growing in those chicks, while in the untreated chicks it remained lower due to still being inhibited by salmonella. Paradox resolved!
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (E).
In this stimulus we are told that chicks treated to reduce salmonella end up a week later with more of some kind of bacteria than untreated chicks. We are asked to help explain the situation. As with most Resolve questions, we should be thinking about what caused this situation to occur. Our prephrase should be about the treatment somehow causing the difference in bacteria levels, since the treatment came before the difference in the two groups showed up.
Answer choice (A): You may be drawn to this answer, thinking that the bacteria is around because the treatment hasn't begun to take effect yet, but this is a trap. The delayed time to administer the treatment actually tells us nothing about what happens AFTER the treatment is administered, or why treated chicks have higher levels than untreated ones.
Answer choice (B): There is nothing in this answer that gives us the cause of the higher levels of bacteria only in the treated chicks.
Answer choice (C): While this is good news for chicks trying to stay healthy, it gives us no cause for, or explanation of, the higher level of bacteria in treated chicks relative to untreated chicks.
Answer choice (D): This answer appears in some ways to make the paradox even more confusing. Untreated chicks have less bacteria than treated ones, but still get sick more often than the treated ones? As this potentially adds more confusion, and does not provide a cause or other explanation for the difference in the groups, it is a loser.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Here we have our causal explanation, although you may find it to be subtle. If this answer is true (and the stem says we are to treat it as if it is), then the salmonella was causing lower levels of bacteria prior to the treatment. Once the salmonella was killed off in the treated chicks, the previously inhibited bacteria had a chance to start growing in those chicks, while in the untreated chicks it remained lower due to still being inhibited by salmonella. Paradox resolved!