QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- which of the following is/are true?
○ a. we should not drive if we have any alcohol in our system, even small amounts.
○ b. most crashes occur when drivers are completely sober.
○ c. even small amounts of alcohol decrease driver judgment and skill, and this increases the likelihood of crashing.
○ d. all of the above
- alcohol and speeding are major factors in fatal crashes. which of the following statements regarding speeding is/are true?
○ a. speeding from place to place saves much time unless a law enforcement officer stops you
○ b. approximately 30% of fatal crashes involve speeding
○ c. increasing your speed from 50 to 60 miles per hour will cut your travel time in half
○ d. all of the above
Question 8
- Option a: While some jurisdictions allow low BAC, even small alcohol affects driving, but "any" is extreme, but let's check others.
- Option b: Most crashes are not when sober (alcohol, distraction are big factors), so b is false.
- Option c: Even small alcohol impairs judgment/skill, increasing crash risk – this is true.
- Option a: The idea that any alcohol (even tiny) means no driving is a safety - focused view, and c is true. But let's re - evaluate:
- a: In strict safety terms, even small alcohol can impair, so some safety guidelines say no driving with any.
- c: Scientifically, even small BAC (like 0.02) can affect reaction, judgment.
- b: False, most crashes aren't with sober drivers (alcohol, speeding, distraction are factors). So a and c are true? Wait, no – the options:
- a: "We should not drive if we have any alcohol..." – from a safety perspective, this is a recommended practice (even small amounts can impair).
- c: "Even small amounts... decrease driver judgment... increase likelihood of crashing" – this is a fact (alcohol is a depressant, affects cognitive and motor skills).
- b: "Most crashes occur when drivers are completely sober" – false, as alcohol - related crashes are a significant portion, and other factors like speeding, distraction also, but sober drivers don't cause most crashes. So a and c are true? But the options are a, b, c, d. Wait, maybe the intended answer is c (and a is a bit extreme, but c is a factual statement about the effect of small alcohol). Wait, let's think again:
- a: Is it true? Legally, in many places, you can drive with a small BAC (like 0.02 - 0.05), but from a safety perspective, even small amounts can impair. But the question is which is/are true.
- c: Is a fact – alcohol, even small, impairs driving ability, increasing crash risk.
- b: False, so b is out.
- So between a and c. But maybe the answer is c (since a is a prescriptive "should" and c is descriptive about the effect). Or maybe a and c? Wait, the options:
- a: "We should not drive if we have any alcohol... even small amounts." – this is a safety recommendation (correct from a safety - first view).
- c: "Even small amounts... decrease driver judgment... increase likelihood of crashing." – this is a scientific fact.
- So both a and c? But the options don't have "a and c". Wait, the options are a, b, c, d (all of the above). But b is false, so d is out. Wait, maybe I made a mistake. Let's check again:
- b: "Most crashes occur when drivers are completely sober." – Statistics show that a significant number of crashes involve alcohol, speeding, distraction. So most crashes are not when sober. So b is false.
- So a and c: a is a safety guideline (true in terms of best practice), c is a fact (true). But the options: if we have to choose from a, b, c, d. Wait, maybe the intended answer is c (and a is a bit of a stretch, but c is definitely true). Or maybe a is considered true (as a safety rule) and c is true, so is there an option? Wait, the options are a, b, c, d. Since b is false, d is out. So between a and c. But maybe the answer is c (and a is a prescriptive statement, but c is descriptive and true). Alternatively, maybe a is considered true (as in, for safety, any alcohol is too much) and c is true, so if we have to pick, c is a definite fact.
- Option a: Speeding does not save much time (e.g., driving 5 miles at 30 mph takes 10 minutes, at 60 mph takes 5 minutes – only 5 minutes saved for 5 miles). Also, the risk of crash increases, so a is false.
- Option b: Approximately 30% of fatal crashes involve speeding – this is a fact (according to traffic safety statistics).
- Option c: Increasing speed from 50 to 60 mph: Time = Distance/Speed. If distance is D, time at 50 is $t_1=\frac{D}{50}$, at 60 is $t_2=\frac{D}{60}$. The ratio $\frac{t_2}{t_1}=\frac{50}{60}=\frac{5}{6}$, so time is reduced by $\frac{1}{6}$, not half. So c is false.
- So only b is true.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
c. Even small amounts of alcohol decrease driver judgment and skill, and this increases the likelihood of crashing. (and also a could be considered, but since b is false, d is out. So the correct options are a and c? But the options given are single - select? Wait, the question is "Which of the following is/are true?" – so it can be multiple. But the options are a, b, c, d. Let's re - check:
- a: True (from a safety - first perspective, any alcohol can impair, so we should not drive).
- b: False.
- c: True (scientific fact).
- So a and c are true. But the options don't have "a and c" as a separate option. Wait, maybe the question is from a driver's education perspective where a is a recommended rule and c is a fact, so the answer is d? No, because b is false. Wait, I must have made a mistake. Let's check the crash statistics: Most crashes are not when drivers are sober. So b is false. So d is out. So the true ones are a and c. But the options are a, b, c, d. So maybe the intended answer is c (and a is a bit extreme, but c is a clear fact). So I'll go with c.