What the Argument Says:1. 50 workers moved to a new room.
2. Both groups saw productivity increases.
3. The conclusion is that the increase happened because researchers were paying attention to them.
Does B Weaken the Conclusion?1. If the drab room was overcrowded before and moving 50 people reduced overcrowding, it could explain why the remaining 50 workers also became more productive—not because of researcher attention, but because they had more space.
2. This would offer an alternative explanation for the productivity increase in the drab room, which does challenge the argument to some extent.
Why B Is Not the Best Answer:
1. It doesn’t explain why the 50 workers who moved to the bright room also improved. The argument needs to explain both groups' increases in productivity.
2. Even if space was a factor for the workers who stayed in the drab room, it doesn’t directly counter the idea that researcher attention influenced both groups.
Why D Is Better:1. D suggests that nearly all workers volunteered for the move. This means the workers who moved were already more motivated, which provides an alternative reason why their productivity increased—completely independent of researchers' attention.
2. If productivity increases were due to pre-existing motivation, then the argument’s conclusion (that researchers' attention caused the boost) is weakened more directly than in B.
I feel
D is the better choice
prakash111687
In a study of the effect of color on productivity, 50 of 100 factory workers were moved from their drab workroom to brightly colored workroom. Both these workers and the 50 who remained in the drab workroom increased their productivity, probably as a result of the interest taken by the researchers in the work of both groups during the study.
Which of the following, if true, would cast most doubt upon the author's interpretation of the study results given above?
(A) The 50 workers moved to the brightly colored room performed precisely the same manufacturing task as the workers who remained in the drab workroom.
(B) The drab workroom was designed to provide adequate space for at most 65 workers.
(C) the 50 workers who moved to the brightly colored workroom were matched as closely as possible in age and level of training to the 50 workeres who remained in the drab workroom.
(D) Nearly all the workers in both groups had volunteered to move to the brightly colored workroom.
(E) Many of the workers who moved to the brightly colored workroom reported that they liked the drab workroom as well as or better than they liked the brightly colored workroom.