by WaltGrace1983 Wed Apr 02, 2014 12:03 pm
Thanks for the response! Upon revisiting this stimulus, I do have another question about it though.
(A) is wrong because we are concerned about comparing the relative impact of the coffee lighteners/milk on the consumer. It doesn't matter if their cholesterol is starting out low, high, medium, whatever. It is all about how the milk or lightener changes their blood cholesterol, the deviation I guess you could say.
(C) We don't care about another coffee lightener that isn't coconut-based or whole milk.
(D) This is right because, in the stimulus, we are comparing the impact of the lightener/milk per one tablespoon. One tablespoon of coconut lighteners causes its consumer's blood cholesterol to rise to a higher level than one tablespoon of whole milk. Yet the conclusion talks about use - who's to say that people only use one tablespoon of whole milk? Maybe they use much more. A strengthener, as this shows, would say that people add more whole milk than coconut-based lighteners.
(E) We don't care about what consumers are CONVINCED of, we want facts.
Yet as for (B), I am a little bit intrigued because I think with a slight change this could have been a correct answer and I want to hear what you think. If (B) would have said something like, "Using whole milk frequently leads consumers to eat pastries and other rich desserts resulting in high blood cholesterol levels when they would not have eaten them otherwise." This seems to show that the use of whole milk is probably more detrimental as it spawns another effect, eating a lot more cholesterol. What do you think?