The answer is B After sorting through all the blah blah in the argument;-
95% of 7 year old kids who suffer from Inability to focus (ITF) watch more than 7 hours of TV.
Assess this argument95% of patient with anaemia have grey hair. (100 patient = 95 have grey hair=> quite possible)
Does it means that 95% of grey hair people suffer from Anaemia -No (1 billion old people with grey hair... are 950,000,000 anaemic => ABSURD )
Similarly
Having four legs and a tail defines an animal=yes
Does all normal cows have four legs and a tail=yes
Are all cows animal? = yes
Are all animals Cow?= No , the set of animals is huge and cow is just a subset of animals. So are dogs, monkeys, bears, cheetah... etc etc
Similarly
Water is a beverage=yes
Vodka is a beverage=yes
thus water is vodka = no
Coming back to our original question
95% of 7 year old patient = Watch 7+ hours TV
Jimmy is 7 year old and watches 8 hour TV so DOES Jimmy has ITF ?? ====> NO
Why ??=====> because Jimmy is not a ITF patient | Jimmy is a normal kid.
Argument tells us that 95% of ITF ill kids watch more than 7 hour of TV
BUT the argument tells us nothing about how many regular healthy kids watch 7+ hours of TV.
AND the argument tell us nothing about what percent of total population of 7 year old are suffering from ITF. (Total population of kids = Healthy Kids + kids with ITF)
OPTION B reinstates the same logic in other words.
(B) Fails to indicate the chances of having this condition among seven-year-old children who watch more than 7 hours of television a day
This is a classic case of mistaken syllogistic reversal that causes mistaken cause-effect error. "Inability to concentrate" is a condition characterized by an inability to focus on any topic for a prolonged period of time, and is especially common among children five to ten years old. A recent study has shown that 95 percent of seven-year-old children with this condition watch, on average, more than seven hours of television a day. It is therefore very likely that James, age seven, suffers from this condition, since he watches roughly eight hours of television a day.
The argument above is flawed because it
(A) cites as a direct causal mechanism a factor that may only be a partial cause of the condition in question
(B) fails to indicate the chances of having this condition among seven-year-old children who watch more than 7 hours of television a day
(C) limits the description of the symptoms of this condition to an inability to focus for a prolonged period of time
(D) fails to consider the possibility that James may be among the 5 percent of children who do not watch more than 7 hours of television a day
(E) does not allow for other causes of this condition besides television watching