Question Type
Explain a Result
Stimulus
A paradoxical result is provided in the stimulus. Why is that a passenger, while increasing the risk of an accident on short trips, has the opposite effect on longer trips?
Anticipate
It seems plausible that the presence of a passenger would help keep the driver awake on longer drives and protect the driver on longer trips from the dangerous possibility of falling asleep. It should be noted that this makes sense only if drivers are more likely to nod off on longer trips.
Correct Answer
(C) describes a difference between the way a passenger influences a driver on longer trips compared to shorter ones. The difference (i.e., increasing the alertness of the driver) is stronger for longer trips and does indeed help to explain why passengers tend to increase the risk of an accident for shorter trips, but then decrease the risk of an accident for longer ones.
Incorrect Answers
(A) is out of scope. The stimulus compares the influence of passangers on the likelihood of an accident on shorter trips compared with longer ones. Those trips that do not have a passenger are out of scope.
(B) fails to explain the differing influence of passengers on drivers. How does this explain why a driver on a longer trip is less likely to have an accident with a passenger than without one?
(D) is out of scope. Why did the first passenger on longer trips reduce the risk of an accident in the first place?
(E) is out of scope. Nothing in this answer explains the reduced likelihood of an accident on a long trip with a passenger and that of long trip without a passenger.
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