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Passage C Cell phones are a danger on the road in more ways than one. Two new studies show that talking on the phone while traveling, whether you’re driving or on foot, is increasing both pedestrian deaths and those of drivers and passengers, and recommend crackdowns on cell use by both pedestrians and drivers. The new studies, lead-authored by Rutgers University, Newark, Economics Professor Peter D. Loeb, relate the impact of cell phones on accident fatalities to the number of cell phones in use, showing that the current increase in deaths resulting from cell phone use follows a period when cell phones actually helped to reduce pedestrian and traffic fatalities. However, this reduction in fatalities disappeared once the numbers of phones in use reached a “critical mass” of 100million, the study found. These studies looked at cell phone use and motor vehicle accidents from 1975 through 2002, and factored in a number of variables, including vehicle speed, alcohol consumption, seat belt use, and miles driven. The studies found the cell phone-fatality correlation to be true even when including factors such as speed, alcohol consumption, and seat belt use. Loeb and his co-author determined that, at the current time, cell phone use has a “significant adverse effect on pedestrian safety” and that “cell phones and their usage above a critical threshold adds to motor vehicle fatalities.” In the late 1980s and part of the 1990s, before the numbers of phones exploded, cell phone use actually had a “life-saving effect” in pedestrian and traffic accidents, Loeb notes. “Cell-phone users were able to quickly call for medical assistance when involved in an accident. This quick medical response actually reduced the number of traffic deaths for a time,” Loeb hypothesizes. However, this was not the case when cells were first used in the mid-1980s, when they caused a “life-taking effect” among pedestrians, drivers and passengers in vehicles. In those early days, when there were fewer than a million phones, fatalities increased, says Loeb, because drivers and pedestrians probably were still adjusting to the novelty of using them, and there weren’t enough cell phones in use to make a difference in summoning help following an accident, he explains. “The ‘life-saving effect’ occurred as the volume of phones grew into the early 1990s, and increasing numbers of cells were used to call 911following accidents, leading toa drop in fatalities”, explains Loeb. But this life-saving effect was canceled out once the numbers of phones reached a “critical mass” of about 100 million and the “life-taking effect” – increased accidents and fatalities outweighed the benefitsofquickaccessto911services, according to Loeb. Loeb and his co-authors used econometric models to analyze data from a number of government and private studies. He and his co-authors recommend that governments consider more aggressive policies to reduce cell phone use by both drivers and pedestrians, to reduce the number of fatalities.
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参考答案:
举一反三
【多选题】计划的性质包括( ).
A.
目的性
B.
普遍性
C.
创新性
D.
战术性
【简答题】conj.和,及,并,然后,接着又 /conj.及(或)
【简答题】插入函数有哪( ) 方式 ? A. 在“公式”选项卡中,单击“插入函数”按钮 B. 在“开始”选项卡 上,单 击“自动求 和”旁的三角按钮 C. 在“插入”选项卡上,单击“公式” D. 在“编辑栏”上,单 击“插入函数”按钮。
【简答题】conj.
【单选题】以昼夜分阴阳,则前半夜为
A.
阴中之阳
B.
阳中之阴
C.
阳中之至阳
D.
阴中之阴
E.
阴中之至阴
【单选题】although conj.
A.
尽管
B.
如果
C.
【简答题】conj.然而;鉴于
【简答题】although /ɔːlˈðəʊ/ conj.
【单选题】以昼夜分阴阳,则前半夜为
A.
阴中之阴
B.
阴中之阳
C.
阳中之阴
D.
阳中之至阳
E.
阴中之至阴
【单选题】and conj.
A.
之后
B.
并且
C.
但是
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