Answer:
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Answer: travel in the unused space between two lines of moving or stationary vehicles.
Explanation:
Motorcycles can drive in the space between two other vehicles. This is also known as<em> ''lane splitting.''</em> When cars are stopped, motorcycles are allowed to move forward, which is time-saving for the riders. In this way, they bypass traffic congestion.
In some states, lane splitting is allowed, while in others it is forbidden. In any case, this remains a controversial issue up to this day. Some people claim that it is safer to move between the cars, than to stop surrounded by stationary vehicles.
The answer is b ....... its already a answered question
Answer:
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Explanation:
National Institute of Standards and Technology is a U.S. federal agency that deals with measurement science, standards, and technology related to U.S. government use and to the promotion of U.S. private sector innovation.
Egocentrism
From the age between 2-7 years old, a child is in the "preoperational stage" of development, characterized by symbolic representation or thinking and egocentric thinking. The child also tends to plan, perceive, and solve problems based on appearances (e.g. a half cup of water in a wide glass is to him/her smaller in amount compared to the same amount of water in a tall thin glass).
A good example of the child's egocentric thinking is most apparent before the child enters kindergarten. When a child is told to hide, he/she usually only covers his/her face, because in his/her thinking, "if i can't see you, then you can't see me!" In egocentrism, the child thinks that other people think and perceive the world the way he/she does.
However, a recent study tried to explain this action of "ineffective hiding" in children as their way of demanding or insisting on reciprocity, and mutual recognition and regard, instead of merely egocentrism (source: https://theconversation.com/young-children-are-terrible-at-hiding-psychologists-have-a-new-theory-why-67979)