What is true about the main idea of this paragraph?
Researchers who study the "science" of shopping note that men always move faster than women through a store's aisle. Men spend
less time looking, too. They usually don't like asking where things are, or any other questions. When a man takes clothing into a
dressing room, the only thing that stops him from buying it is if it doesn't fit. Women, on the other hand, try things on as only part of
the consideration process, and garments that fit just fine may still be rejected on other grounds. Here's another contrast: 86 percent
of women look at price tags when they shop. Only 72 percent of men do. For a man, ignoring the price tag is almost a measure of his
masculinity. As a result, men are far more easily encouraged to buy more expensive versions of the same product than are women
shoppers. They are also far more suggestible than women-men seem so anxious to get out of the store that they'll say yes to
almost anything.