To determine A's score in the fourth aptitude test, we need to examine both statements provided.
- From Statement 1:
"A's score in the fourth test was 12 points higher than the average score in the first three tests written."- Let the average score of the first three tests be \( x \).
- Then, A's score in the fourth test is \( x + 12 \).
- However, without knowing the value of \( x \), we cannot determine the exact score.
- From Statement 2:
"A's score on the fourth test raised the average test score from 80 to 85."- Let the total score for the first three tests = \( 3 \times 80 = 240 \).
- Total score after the fourth test = \( 4 \times 85 = 340 \).
- So, A's score in the fourth test added to 240 should equal 340, giving: \(x = 340 - 240 = 100\).
- This calculation accurately determines the score as 100.
Now, combining both statements:
- From Statement 1, A's fourth test score is \( x + 12 \).
- From Statement 2, the fourth test raised the average score from 80 to 85, concluding the score must be 100.
- Both statements complement each other but aren't logically interdependent for finding \( x\).
Conclusion: Statement 2 alone gives the fourth test score as 100.
Therefore, the correct interpretation of the provided options is that both statements together can provide further reasoning, but Statement 2 alone suffices to derive the exact score, making the best choice:
Correct Answer: Statement (2) alone is sufficient to answer the question.