mundasingh123 wrote:
I wish to resolve my doubt . So i am addressing this post to an expert
Hi David/Ron /Brian/GmatGuruNY / any other expert
E says that the average age of the people suffering from alzeimers disease was higher than that of people suffering from injury induced memory loss. This tells us that mechanism by which alzheimers disease causes memory loss may be different from the mechanism by which injury causes memory loss . This strengthens the argument too .
Is this Logic so unreasonable ?
Two reasons to eliminate E.
E discusses a difference in AGE between the two groups.
Thus, E could WEAKEN the conclusion by implying that it wasn't the TYPE of memory loss (Alzheimer's vs. brain injury) but the AGE of the two groups that caused the drug to have different effects.
Be skeptical of AVERAGES.
Answer choice E states only that the AVERAGE age of the brain injury group was less than the AVERAGE age of the Alzheimer's group.
It could be that EVERYONE in the brain injury group is 50 years younger than EVERYONE in the Alzheimer's group.
It could be that everyone in the two groups is of the SAME age except for ONE person in the brain injury group who happens to be just ONE YEAR younger than everyone else.
Thus, information about the average age of each group is of limited value.
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