Answer:
(C) computer owners in the United States predominately belong to a demographic group that have long been known to spend less time watching television than the population as a whole does.
Step-by-step explanation:
According to a different source, these are the options that come with this question:
(A) many people who watch little or no television do not own a computer.
(B) even though most computer owners in the United States watch significantly less television than the national average, some computer owners watch far more television than the national average.
(C) computer owners in the United States predominately belong to a demographic group that have long been known to spend less time watching television than the population as a whole does.
(D) many computer owners in the United States have enough leisure time that spending significant amounts of time on the computer still leaves ample time for watching television.
(E) many people use their computers primarily for tasks such as correspondence that can be done more rapidly on the computer, and doing so leaves more leisure time for watching television.
This is the statement that best explains the reason why this finding does not show that computer use tends to reduce television viewing time. This is because the conclusion does not consider the fact that the demographic that owns computers (mostly teenagers and young adults) are also the demographic that has been known, for a long time, to spend less time watching television than the population as a whole.