98. The following graphs show the glucose and insulin responses of test subjects to Phases II and III of the study. (Page 256 in 2010 edition)
(Graphs show a change in slope. The maximum glucose and insulin levels take longer to be reached when phaseolamin was given. However, once reached, the maximum values are the same.)
These data indicate that when phaseolamin was given to these subjects, it produced:
C. No change in glucose or insulin responses compared to the placebo
D. Decreases in both the glucose and insulin responses compared to the placebo test
If AAMC asked this, would you be comfortable selecting one choice over the other? Why?
(I'm not sure if I'm unaware of something major when it comes to interpreting graphs, or if this is just a lousy question that I should forget about.)
(Graphs show a change in slope. The maximum glucose and insulin levels take longer to be reached when phaseolamin was given. However, once reached, the maximum values are the same.)
These data indicate that when phaseolamin was given to these subjects, it produced:
C. No change in glucose or insulin responses compared to the placebo
D. Decreases in both the glucose and insulin responses compared to the placebo test
If AAMC asked this, would you be comfortable selecting one choice over the other? Why?
(I'm not sure if I'm unaware of something major when it comes to interpreting graphs, or if this is just a lousy question that I should forget about.)