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Passage conclusion is that
"most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting"

C) who are in poorer general health are therefore inclined to spend more time sitting
This is irrelevant because we only interesting spending less time sitting

D) keyword is "most"
we don't know most people could lower mortality risk because most people may not be in 4hours <= part.
So the answer is D
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MartyMurray I also choose C but the official answer is D. This is GMAT Prep (Focus) question.

I do no understand how.
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MartyMurray I also choose C but the official answer is D. This is GMAT Prep (Focus) question.

I do no understand how
On wow. I"ve edited my explanation. I think you'll see what's going on now.
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Thank you so much!
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KarishmaB MartyMurray Can you please explain choice B and D using the variance or YES/No technique ?
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KarishmaB Thank you for responding. But you dint reject the option B by using the YES/No Technique.
I am trying to apply YES/NO technique on option B.

The conclusion is :- Most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

OPTION B when YES,
Most adults spend less than eleven hours a day sitting , then answer is YES , They could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting , provided they fall in the range of 4-11 hours ' time  and dont spend very little time sitting . 


OPTION B when NO ,
Most adults spend more than eleven hours a day sitting , then also the answer is YES , They could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting because they have the bandwidth which they can lower down.

Since on both these extremes , the answer is YES , we are rejecting option B. KarishmaB Am I correct ? chetan2u
KarishmaB

ekwok
A large-scale study of adults over fifty years old who spent an average of four to eleven hours a day sitting found that the mortality rates of those who spent less time sitting were consistently lower over three years - even after controlling for age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency, all of which affect mortality rates. The researchers concluded that most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

In order to assess the strength of the researchers' reasoning, it would be most helpful to know whether most adults over fifty years old

A) who spend less time sitting exercise more frequently
B) spend less than eleven hours a day sitting
C) who are in poorer general health are therefore inclined to spend more time sitting
D) spend at least four hours a day sitting
E) who participated in the study were approximately consistent in the numbers of hour they spent sitting each day

Attachment:
Screenshot 2024-02-05 at 8.59.47 AM.png
It was a tough question. I had to go quite extreme to get the answer but then, that is what we are expected to do in "Useful to Evaluate'' questions.

­Premises:
A large-scale study of adults over fifty years old who spent an average of 4-11 hours a day sitting found that the mortality rates of those who spent less time sitting were consistently lower over three years - even after controlling for age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency.

Conclusion: 
Most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

A study was conducted on 50+ year olds who spent an average of 4-11 hours a day sitting. Those who spent < 4 or > 11 were not included in the study. The results were adjusted for their age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency. So essentially, you can consider that these factors were equal for all of them.

It was concluded that most people can lower their mortality risk just by spending less time sitting.

Question stem: In order to assess the strength of the researchers' reasoning, it would be most helpful to know whether most adults over fifty years old...
We need to find that which of the following information about "most adults over fifty years old" will be helpful in evaluating the claim.

A) who spend less time sitting exercise more frequently

We had adjusted for exercise. Ignore.

B) spend less than eleven hours a day sitting

The result shows that lower the hours of sitting, lower the mortality risk. If most adults over 50 spend more than 11 hours, they CAN reduce their mortality risk by spending less time sitting. They have the margin to reduce the hours of sitting. 

C) who are in poorer general health are therefore inclined to spend more time sitting

We had adjusted for general health. Ignore.

D) spend at least four hours a day sitting

Here is the thing - what if most adults over 50 do not sit at all? CAN they reduce their mortality risk by spending less time sitting? No. When they have no sitting time, they cannot reduce it. 

Yes/No Test:
YES, most adults over 50 do spend at least four hours a day sitting - Great! They can reduce this to reduce mortality risk. Researcher's claim works. 
NO, most adults over 50 do spend at least four hours a day sitting - They are already spending little to no time sitting. How can they further reduce it to reduce mortality risk? Researcher's claim doesn't work. 
Correct.

E) who participated in the study were approximately consistent in the numbers of hour they spent sitting each day.

Consistency over the days has no role to play. We are talking about average over 3 years. So overall active life vs sedentary life. Ignore. 

Answer (D)

Discussion on Useful to Evaluate Questions:
https://youtu.be/1JtHjH1lWZc


 
­
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sayan640
KarishmaB Thank you for responding. But you dint reject the option B by using the YES/No Technique.
I am trying to apply YES/NO technique on option B.

The conclusion is :- Most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

OPTION B when YES,
Most adults spend less than eleven hours a day sitting , then answer is YES , They could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting , provided they fall in the range of 4-11 hours ' time  and dont spend very little time sitting . 


OPTION B when NO ,
Most adults spend more than eleven hours a day sitting , then also the answer is YES , They could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting because they have the bandwidth which they can lower down.

Since on both these extremes , the answer is YES , we are rejecting option B. KarishmaB Am I correct ? chetan2u
KarishmaB

ekwok
A large-scale study of adults over fifty years old who spent an average of four to eleven hours a day sitting found that the mortality rates of those who spent less time sitting were consistently lower over three years - even after controlling for age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency, all of which affect mortality rates. The researchers concluded that most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

In order to assess the strength of the researchers' reasoning, it would be most helpful to know whether most adults over fifty years old

A) who spend less time sitting exercise more frequently
B) spend less than eleven hours a day sitting
C) who are in poorer general health are therefore inclined to spend more time sitting
D) spend at least four hours a day sitting
E) who participated in the study were approximately consistent in the numbers of hour they spent sitting each day

Attachment:
Screenshot 2024-02-05 at 8.59.47 AM.png
It was a tough question. I had to go quite extreme to get the answer but then, that is what we are expected to do in "Useful to Evaluate'' questions.

­Premises:
A large-scale study of adults over fifty years old who spent an average of 4-11 hours a day sitting found that the mortality rates of those who spent less time sitting were consistently lower over three years - even after controlling for age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency.

Conclusion: 
Most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

A study was conducted on 50+ year olds who spent an average of 4-11 hours a day sitting. Those who spent < 4 or > 11 were not included in the study. The results were adjusted for their age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency. So essentially, you can consider that these factors were equal for all of them.

It was concluded that most people can lower their mortality risk just by spending less time sitting.

Question stem: In order to assess the strength of the researchers' reasoning, it would be most helpful to know whether most adults over fifty years old...
We need to find that which of the following information about "most adults over fifty years old" will be helpful in evaluating the claim.

A) who spend less time sitting exercise more frequently

We had adjusted for exercise. Ignore.

B) spend less than eleven hours a day sitting

The result shows that lower the hours of sitting, lower the mortality risk. If most adults over 50 spend more than 11 hours, they CAN reduce their mortality risk by spending less time sitting. They have the margin to reduce the hours of sitting. 

C) who are in poorer general health are therefore inclined to spend more time sitting

We had adjusted for general health. Ignore.

D) spend at least four hours a day sitting

Here is the thing - what if most adults over 50 do not sit at all? CAN they reduce their mortality risk by spending less time sitting? No. When they have no sitting time, they cannot reduce it. 

Yes/No Test:
YES, most adults over 50 do spend at least four hours a day sitting - Great! They can reduce this to reduce mortality risk. Researcher's claim works. 
NO, most adults over 50 do spend at least four hours a day sitting - They are already spending little to no time sitting. How can they further reduce it to reduce mortality risk? Researcher's claim doesn't work. 
Correct.

E) who participated in the study were approximately consistent in the numbers of hour they spent sitting each day.

Consistency over the days has no role to play. We are talking about average over 3 years. So overall active life vs sedentary life. Ignore. 

Answer (D)

Discussion on Useful to Evaluate Questions:
https://youtu.be/1JtHjH1lWZc



 
­
­It is correct. I have added the test discussion to (B) too.
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This is a rather simple question when you think less of it. Evaluate type questions are tricky, and if you have done a good chunk of weaken-strengthen questions, you would land on that C button faster than a kamikaze. If your instinct was to go for C before completely evaluating all the other options, congratulations, you have attained a proper feel of GMAT CR questions.

However, the main rule of CR is: premise is king.

The premise in clear words states that the study is controlled in the aspects of age, weight, general health, exercise.
A control in a scientific study is done to omit outside factors from affecting desirable results. eg: I want to check whether TTP, e-gmat, Anaprep, Magoosh or Manhattan is better. I will have 5 people of identical mental, physical, environmental and all other external factors to go through these courses and graph out the results. That is what control in a study means.

Why I called this simple was because, while doing the first reading itself, the passage told me that I would not have to bother myself with options concerning any of the listed factors and voila! I was left with just two, B and D. Now doing as KarishmaB did, would surely be the best approach.

Just by following this one rule that CR has, even if you did not have evaluative capabilities, in this question and some other good ones, you could end up with a choice between 2 competing options, which are much better odds than the current 30% correct rate this question has as of now.
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Study Group: adults over fifty years old who spent an average of four to eleven hours a day sitting

Observation: mortality rates of those who spent less time sitting were consistently lower over three years - even after controlling for age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency, all of which affect mortality rates

conclusion: most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

True only if majority population in 4-11 sitting cycle group. Hence, D


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Conclusion is : most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

The stem asks: In order to assess the strength of the researchers' reasoning, it would be most helpful to know whether mostadults over fifty years old

Correct D) spend at least four hours a day sitting - If Yes - then it is strengthened - if most i.e. more than half or more than 50% of the people spent >= 4 hrs a day sitting, then only most (> 50%) adults will be able to lower their mortality

If no, then let's say only 1% adults sit for more than 4 hrs a day, then only 1%will be able to reduce the mortality risk.
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A large-scale study of adults over fifty years old who spent an average of four to eleven hours a day sitting found that the mortality rates of those who spent less time sitting were consistently lower over three years - even after controlling for age, weight, general health, and exercise frequency, all of which affect mortality rates. The researchers concluded that most adults over fifty years old could lower their mortality risk over the next three years just by spending less time sitting.

We do one study and then we generalize that study for most adults over 50. The study focusses on the people who spend an average of 4 to 11 hours. But how about the people who spend less than 4 hrs or more then 11 hrs. They are not part of the study.

In order to assess the strength of the researchers' reasoning, it would be most helpful to know whether most adults over fifty years old

A) who spend less time sitting exercise more frequently - No. This has been accounted for already.

B) spend less than eleven hours a day sitting - They can benefit from this either way.

C) who are in poorer general health are therefore inclined to spend more time sitting - No. General health has been accounted for already.

D) spend at least four hours a day sitting - This is important because if most adults spend less than 4 hours say 1 hr. even no hr sitting, how can they reduce their mortality rate by sitting less when they are already sitting less.

E) who participated in the study were approximately consistent in the numbers of hour they spent sitting each day - consistency is out of scope. We need between average 4 to 11 hrs.
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Could someone please help me - confused even after reading the explanations!!

I want to understand why we are assuming that if someone sits more than 11 hours, then reducing their sitting hours would still help them?

Assume someone sits for 15 hrs a day. Reducing sitting hours by one or two hours may have NO EFFECT on their health? They may be too unfit for it to show much improvement. Don’t understand how we can apply the logic that people under 3 hrs sitting are out of scope but those over 11 hrs are not ?!
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anushkatew
Could someone please help me - confused even after reading the explanations!!

I want to understand why we are assuming that if someone sits more than 11 hours, then reducing their sitting hours would still help them?

Assume someone sits for 15 hrs a day. Reducing sitting hours by one or two hours may have NO EFFECT on their health? They may be too unfit for it to show much improvement. Don’t understand how we can apply the logic that people under 3 hrs sitting are out of scope but those over 11 hrs are not ?!
1. I agree with your logic
2. Another possiblity is that if someone sits for more than 11 hours perhaps their body could enter a state that negates the negatives of sitting i.e the correlation between sitting long and mortality fails to hold past 11 hours (you can't extrapolate)
3. I think that perhaps the reasoning to why option B is not the correct answer is because as MartyMurray pointed out the text says less than 11 hours which means it could include 11 hours
4. I don't think E is completely out of scope. The standard deviation of the hours is something to consider:

Suppose David sits:
  • Day 1: 2 hours
  • Day 2: 20 hours
  • Day 3: 1 hour
  • Day 4: 19 hours
  • Day 5: 3 hours
    Average = 9 hours, which falls in the “high sitting → higher mortality” group.

Suppose Alex sits:
  • Day 1: 10 hours
  • Day 2: 8 hours
  • Day 3: 9 hour
  • Day 4: 10 hours
  • Day 5: 8 hours
    Average = 9 hours, which falls in the “high sitting → higher mortality” group.


But you can’t assume the negative effects of high sitting apply to David in the same way they apply to Alex.

**I have a hard time with verbal questions because I overthink them, please someone tell me why im wrong**
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