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­Such a brilliant question that looks easy because of the everyday context it uses and because of the simple table. But it is in fact fairly complex with not one but two layers of complexity.

  1. Layer 1 – Dataset presents multiple criteria and the decisions that Felipe took.
  2. Layer 2 – The complex question statement! We need to find if the additional criterion presented in the statement helps explain any of the conclusions arrived at in the dataset. If it does, then the answer for that statement is YES. If it does not explain any of the conclusions, then the answer for that statement is NO.

Watch this video solution to understand how you should use the “owning the dataset” mindset to solve such questions.




Let us know if you have any questions.
­
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­Such a brilliant question that looks easy because of the everyday context it uses and because of the simple table. But it is in fact fairly complex with not one but two layers of complexity.

  1. Layer 1 – Dataset presents multiple criteria and the decisions that Felipe took.
  2. Layer 2 – The complex question statement! We need to find if the additional criterion presented in the statement helps explain any of the conclusions arrived at in the dataset. If it does, then the answer for that statement is YES. If it does not explain any of the conclusions, then the answer for that statement is NO.

Watch this video solution to understand how you should use the “owning the dataset” mindset to solve such questions.



Let us know if you have any questions.
­

How is statement 2 explaining atleast 1 conclusion?
Although the statement helps in justification for the selection of R2 over R5, it neither explains the reason for preference of R1 > R6 > R2, nor it explains the reason for rejection of R4 and R5.
Could you please explain this point? egmat

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chetan2u
GMAT Focus Simple yet Tricky question.
­
chetan2u

Felipe has concluded that:
  • his first preference is Room 1, second is Room 6, and third is Room 2
I think the third preference should be Room 3 instead of Room 2. Though it was not required in the question but still it defies "preference" logic used.

 
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Ankit__7182

chetan2u
GMAT Focus Simple yet Tricky question.
­
chetan2u

Felipe has concluded that:

  • his first preference is Room 1, second is Room 6, and third is Room 2
I think the third preference should be Room 3 instead of Room 2. Though it was not required in the question but still it defies "preference" logic used.


 
­Normally, I would go for what you have told. But since the preference is room 2 over room 3, and we are to find a logic for that preference, my take would be -

What can we say about the strength of people attending?
It would surely be more than 8 and at the most 12 ( reason why room 1 is first preference).

Preferences : He surely would prefer a VC and Projector, and 2 and 3 have the same status.

Difference :
1. The difference is room 2 has 12 and room 3 has a max capacity of 20. Now, we know he expects at the most 12, so would a room with larger capacity than what is required preferable. If there is no Video Conferencing, he may want the best possible use of tele conferencing and smaller room may be a better choice.
2. Availabilty of room 2 on a later day. It is mentioned that he prefers the conference earlier in the week. Note he is not looking for the earliest in week. Maybe both Tuesday and Wednesday would fit in when we speak of earlier in the week. 
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What if he is planning on hosting atleast 9 people instead of 10?

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­Yeah exactly, not sure why it cannot be 9. No one here has addressed it.
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hritik_jain
What if he is planning on hosting atleast 9 people instead of 10?

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­hritik_jain and jeet1204

We are looking at if the option is able to justify certain details of the table. You have to assume the information to be true and see if it helps in explaining at least one of Felipe's conclusions.
So, if he is planning to host at least 10 persons, then he discarding rooms with max occupancy of 8 people is justified.

You are mistaking it with finding whether the option can be derived from the table.
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Oh! Yes. Thank you. “If the statement is true would it help explain his choices”- ✅

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Thanks for the video.

For statement 3, I marked "No". Reason being- what if he wants to book a room for 9 people? In that case too he would reject 4 and 5, and choose 1,2 or 6. Please let me know where am I going wrong?

Thanks.
egmat
­Such a brilliant question that looks easy because of the everyday context it uses and because of the simple table. But it is in fact fairly complex with not one but two layers of complexity.

  1. Layer 1 – Dataset presents multiple criteria and the decisions that Felipe took.
  2. Layer 2 – The complex question statement! We need to find if the additional criterion presented in the statement helps explain any of the conclusions arrived at in the dataset. If it does, then the answer for that statement is YES. If it does not explain any of the conclusions, then the answer for that statement is NO.

Watch this video solution to understand how you should use the “owning the dataset” mindset to solve such questions.




Let us know if you have any questions.
­
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Thanks for the video.

For statement 3, I marked "No". Reason being- what if he wants to book a room for 9 people? In that case too he would reject 4 and 5, and choose 1,2 or 6. Please let me know where am I going wrong?

Thanks.
egmat
­Such a brilliant question that looks easy because of the everyday context it uses and because of the simple table. But it is in fact fairly complex with not one but two layers of complexity.

  1. Layer 1 – Dataset presents multiple criteria and the decisions that Felipe took.
  2. Layer 2 – The complex question statement! We need to find if the additional criterion presented in the statement helps explain any of the conclusions arrived at in the dataset. If it does, then the answer for that statement is YES. If it does not explain any of the conclusions, then the answer for that statement is NO.

Watch this video solution to understand how you should use the “owning the dataset” mindset to solve such questions.




Let us know if you have any questions.
­
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For all those who think the third option is 'no', because the least number could be 9 as well, let me break it down for you. I made the mistake too.
Look at the last statement - a.k.a the main question:
' Based on the information provided, for each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement would, if true, help explain at least one of Felipe's conclusions. Otherwise, select No'
So you have to first assume that the statement 3 is True. And then you look at the table. Even if the statement was at least 9, 11 or 12 people, the statement would still explain his reason to not select an 8-person room.
Hence, the answer is 'yes'
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same question!
hritik_jain
What if he is planning on hosting atleast 9 people instead of 10?

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the answer will be still yes because then he can't choose room 4 and 5, and in the question stem it's clearly mentioned that we need to make sure one of the conclusion hold true. please check the question stem ie, starting from based on the information provided.
hritik_jain
What if he is planning on hosting atleast 9 people instead of 10?

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