根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)
You
run into the grocery store to pick up one bottle of water. You get what you need,
head to the front, and choose the line that looks fastest.
You
chose wrong. People who you swear got in other lines long after you are already
checked out and off to the parking lot.
It
turns out, it's just math working against you; chances are, the other line really
is faster.
Grocery
stores try to have enough employees at checkout to get all their customers through
with minimum delay. Any small interruption — a price check, a chatty
customer — can have downstream effects, holding up an entire line.
If
there are three lines in the store, delays will happen randomly at different registers.
Think about the probability: So it's not just in your mind: Another line probably
is moving faster.
Researchers
have a good way to deal with this problem. Make all customers stand in one long,
snaking line — called a serpentine line — and serve each person at the front with
the next available register. This is what they do at most banks and fast-food
restaurants. With a serpentine line, a long delay at one register won't unfairly
punish the people who lined up behind it. Instead, it will slow down everyone a
little bit but speed up checkout overall.
It takes many registers to keep one line moving
quickly, and some stores can't afford the space or manpower. So wherever your next
wait may be: Good luck.
A.
Why does this always seem to happen to you?
B.
So why don't most places encourage serpentine lines?
C.
Some of them may have stood in a queue for almost an hour.
D.
The chances of your line being the fastest are only one in three.
E.
How high is the probability that you are in the fastest waiting line?
F.
With three registers, this method is much faster than the traditional approach.
G.
But sometimes, as on a Sunday afternoon, the system gets particularly busy.
答案:【1】A【2】G【3】D【4】F【5】B