bschool17 wrote:
Misread the question first time.. note the underlined portion of the premise.
What it means ->
Group A & B with 3000 cal per person.
Group A -> 3000 cal + 750 cal (in alcohol) = Total 3750 cal
Group B -> 3000 cal ~ replace 750 cal with alcohol = Total 3000 cal Both Group have 750 cal fromalcohol
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
result -> Gained body fat in BOTH!!!
Conclusion : Gained in body fat isNOT a result of increased calories intake but of content eaten.
OnlyD fits!
Please point out any error in logic here.
Thanks
In a recent study, a group of subjects had their normal daily caloric intake increased by 25percent . This increase was entirely in the form of alcohol. Another group of similar subjects had alcohol replace non-alcoholic sources of 25 percent of their normal daily caloricintake . All subjects gained body fat over the course of study, and the amount of body fat gained was the same
...
What it means ->
Group A & B with 3000 cal per person.
Group A -> 3000 cal + 750 cal (in alcohol) = Total 3750 cal
Group B -> 3000 cal ~ replace 750 cal with alcohol = Total 3000 cal Both Group have 750 cal fromalcohol
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
result -> Gained body fat in BOTH!!!
Conclusion : Gained in body fat isNOT a result of increased calories intake but of content eaten.
OnlyD fits!
Please point out any error in logic here.
Thanks
dentobizz wrote:
In a recent study, a group of subjects had their normal daily caloric intake increased by 25percent . This increase was entirely in the form of alcohol. Another group of similar subjects had alcohol replace non-alcoholic sources of 25 percent of their normal daily caloricintake . All subjects gained body fat over the course of study, and the amount of body fat gained was the same
...
Statistics : Posted by Ved22 • on 11 Nov 2013, 13:41 • Replies 13 • Views 14971













