Confusing Strengthen Question

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Confusing Strengthen Question

by Bens4vcobra » Thu Jun 23, 2011 4:23 pm
A study followed a group of teenagers who had never smoked and tracked whether they took up smoking and how their mental health changed. After one year, the incidence of depression among those who had taken up smoking was four times as high as it was among those who had not. Since nicotine in cigarettes changes brain chemistry, perhaps thereby affecting mood, it is likely that smoking contributes to depression in teenagers.

Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the argument?

A. Participants who were depressed at the start of the study were no more likely to be smokers after one year than those who were not depressed.

B. The study did not distinguish between participants who smoked only occasionally and those who were heavy smokers.

C. Few, if any, of the participants in the study were friends or relatives of other participants.

D. Some participants entered and emerged from a period of depression within the year of the study.

E. The researchers did not track use of alcohol by the teenagers.

The answer is A but I feel this actually weakens the argument because it seems to be indicating a correlation doesn't exist. B seems to strengthen b/c if some teens only smoked occasionally but were more likely to be depressed than ones who didn't smoke, this would strengthen the correlation.

Expert replies highly appreciated.
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by Ian Stewart » Thu Jun 23, 2011 4:42 pm
This is a question about cause and effect. The stem suggests that smoking leads to depression. Isn't the reverse equally possible - that depression leads people to start smoking? We need to eliminate that second possibility to strengthen the argument, which is what A does.
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