Sunday, September 30, 2018

ROMAN ENGINEERING TRICKS - Rome's brilliant architectural, organizational and engineering feats that make them stand out among the ancient peoples. Despite the fact that their knowledge of math was rudimentary, they constructed models, experimented, and built as sturdily as possible to compensate for their inability to calculate for stress and weight. The result is a set of edifices and architectural achievements that stretch from the Limyra Bridge in Turkey to Hadrian's Wall in the United Kingdom. With so many brilliant examples, many of which are still in excellent condition, it's hard not to have picked up a few pointers about how to build structures that last.

When it came to building aqueducts, the ancient Romans were pros.
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Roman Engineering Tricks

They don't build them like they used to. Ancient Roman roads like the Appian Way were made to last.10 Cool Engineering Tricks the Romans Taught Us

BY GALLAGHER FLINN

Some stuff the ancient Romans were good at -- other stuff they weren't.
In terms of the abstract sciences and literature, they were always in the shadow of their Greek neighbors.
Their poetry never reached the same heights, their philosophies of Stoicism and Epicureanism were borrowed, and anyone who's ever used Roman numerals knows how difficult the system was even for even simple arithmetic.
If you wanted someone to explain geometry, you asked a Greek.
If you wanted someone to build you a floating bridge, a sewer network or a weapon that could fire flaming balls of gravel and tar 300 hundred yards (274 meters), you called a Roman.
As much as the Greeks gave us, Rome's brilliant architectural, organizational and engineering feats that make them stand out among the ancient peoples.
Despite the fact that their knowledge of math was rudimentary, they constructed models, experimented, and built as sturdily as possible to compensate for their inability to calculate for stress and weight.
The result is a set of edifices and architectural achievements that stretch from the Limyra Bridge in Turkey to Hadrian's Wall in the United Kingdom.
With so many brilliant examples, many of which are still in excellent condition, it's hard not to have picked up a few pointers about how to build structures that last.
Read on for 10 of Rome's coolest engineering feats.
10  The Dome
We take interior space for granted in the modern world, but we shouldn't.
Our enormous vaulted arches, huge atriums (a Latin word, by the way), hollow steel and glass skyscrapers, even a simple high school gymnasium -- all of these structures were inconceivable in the ancient world.
Before the Romans perfected dome-building, even the best architects had to deal with the problem of a heavy stone roof, forcing them to crowd the floors of temples and public buildings with columns and load-bearing walls.
Even the greatest architectural achievements before Roman architecture -- the Parthenon and the Pyramids -- were much more impressive on the outside. Inside, they were dark, confined spaces.
Roman domes, by contrast, were spacious, open and created a real sense of interior space for the first time in history.
Stemming from the realization that the principles of the arch could be rotated into three dimensions to create a shape that had the same supportive power but an even larger area, dome technology was mostly due to the availability of concrete, another Roman innovation that we'll discuss later in this article.
This substance was poured into molds on a wooden scaffolding, leaving the hard, strong shell of the dome behind.
9    Siege Warfare
Like a lot of technology, Roman siege weaponry was mostly developed by the Greeks and then perfected by the Romans. 
Ballistae, essentially giant crossbows that could fire large stones during sieges, were mostly back-engineered designs from captured Greek weapons.
Using loops of twisted animal sinews for power, ballistae worked almost like springs in giant mousetraps -- when the sinews were tightly wound and then allowed to snap back, they could launch projectiles up to 500 hundred yards (457 meters).
Since it was light and accurate, this weapon could also be fitted with javelins or large arrows and used to pick off members of opposing armies (as an anti-personnel weapon).
Ballistae were also used to target small buildings during sieges.
Romans also invented their own siege engines called onagers (named after the wild donkey and its powerful kick) to fling larger rocks.
Though they also used springy animal sinews, onagers were much more powerful mini-catapults that fired a sling or a bucket filled with either round stones or combustible clay balls.
Though they were much less accurate than ballistae, they were also more powerful, making them perfect for blasting down walls and setting fires during sieges.
8    Concrete
As far as innovations in building material go, a liquid rock that's both lighter and stronger than regular stone is hard to beat.
Today, concrete is so much a part of our daily lives that it's easy to forget just how revolutionary it is.
Roman concrete was a special mixture of rubble, lime, sand and pozzolana, a volcanic ash. Not only could the mixture be poured into any form you could build a wooden mold for, it was much, much stronger than any of its component parts.
Though it was originally used by Roman architects to form strong bases for altars, starting in the 2nd century B.C., the Romans began to experiment with concrete to produce more freestanding forms.
Their most famous concrete structure, the Pantheon, still stands as the largest unreinforced concrete structure in the world after more than two thousand years.
As we mentioned earlier, this was a major improvement on the old Etruscan and Greek rectangular styles of architecture, which demanded heavy walls and columns everywhere.
Even better, concrete as a building material was cheap and fireproof. It could also set underwater and was flexible enough to survive the earthquakes that plague the volcanic Italic Peninsula.
7    Roads
It's impossible to mention Roman engineering without talking about roads, which were so well-constructed that many of them are still in use today.
Comparing our own asphalt highways to an ancient Roman road is like comparing a cheap watch to a Swiss version. They were strong, precise and built to last.
The best Roman roads were built in several stages. First, workers dug about 3 feet (0.9 meters) down into the terrain where the planned road would be. Next, wide and heavy stone blocks were set in the bottom of the trench and then covered with a layer of dirt or gravel that would allow drainage.
Finally, the top layer was paved with flagstones, with a bulge in the center for water to run off.
In general, Roman roads were about 3 feet (0.9 meters) thick and enormously resistant to the ravages of time.
In typical Roman fashion, engineers of the Empire insisted on using straight lines for their roads primarily and tended to push through obstacles rather than building around them.
If there was a forest, they cut it. If there was a hill, they tunneled through it. If there was a swamp, they drained it.
The drawback, of course, to that type of road building is the enormous amount of manpower required, but manpower (in the form of thousands of slaves) was something that the ancient Romans always had in spades.
By A.D. 200, there were more than 53,000 miles (85,295 kilometers) of major highways crisscrossing the Roman Empire [source: Kleiner].
6    Sewers
The great sewers of the Roman Empire are one of the oddities of Roman engineering in that they weren't exactly built to be sewers in the first place -- as immense and complex as they were, they weren't so much invented as they just sort of happened.
The Cloaca Maxima (or Biggest Sewer if you want to translate it directly) was originally just a channel built to drain some local marshes.
Digging commenced around 600 B.C., and over the next 700 hundred years, more and more waterways were added.
Since more channels were dug whenever it was deemed necessary, it's hard to tell when the Cloaca Maxima stopped being a drainage ditch and became a proper sewer.
Primitive though it was initially, the Cloaca Maxima spread like a weed, stretching its roots deeper and deeper into the city as it grew.
Unfortunately, because the Cloaca Maxima drained directly into the Tiber, the river became absolutely swollen with human waste.
That's certainly not an ideal situation, but with their aqueducts, the Romans didn't need to use the Tiber for drinking or washing.
They even had a goddess to watch over their system -- Cloacina, the Venus of the Sewer.
Perhaps the most important and brilliant innovation of the Roman sewer system is the fact that it was (eventually) covered, cutting down on disease, smells and unpleasant sights.
Any civilization can dig a ditch to go to the bathroom in, but it takes some impressive engineering to monitor and maintain a sewer system so complex that Pliny the Elder even declared it more stupendous than the Pyramids as a monument to human achievement.
5    Heated Floors
Controlling the temperature in any building efficiently is one of the hardest engineering tasks humans have had to deal with, but the Romans had it solved -- or at least, almost solved.
Employing an idea that we still use to this day in the form of radiant heat flooring, hypocausts were sets of hollow clay columns spaced every few feet below a raised floor through which hot air and steam were pumped from a furnace in another room.
Unlike other, less advanced heating methods, hypocausts neatly solved two of the problems that have always been associated with heating in the ancient world -- smoke and fire.
Fire was the only available source of heat, but it also had the unfortunate side effect of burning down buildings from time to time, and smoke from an indoor flame can be deadly in a closed space.
However, because the floor was raised in a hypocaust, hot air from the furnace never actually came into contact with the room itself.
Rather than entering the room, the heated air was piped through hollow tiles in the walls. As it passed out of the building, the clay tiles absorbed the heat, leaving the room itself steamy and Roman toes toasty warm.
4    The Aqueduct
Along with roads, aqueducts are the other engineering marvel that the Romans are the most famous for.
The thing about aqueducts is that they're long. Really long.
One of the difficulties of watering a large city is that once the city gets to a certain size, you really can't get clean water from anywhere near it.
And though Rome sits on the Tiber, the river itself was polluted by another Roman engineering achievement, their sewer system.
To solve the problem, Roman engineers built aqueducts -- networks of underground pipes, above-ground water lines and elegant bridges, all designed to channel water into the city from the surrounding countryside.
Once in Rome, water from the aqueducts was collected in cisterns before being distributed to the fountains and public baths the Romans loved so dearly.
Just like their roads, the Roman aqueduct system was incredibly long and complicated. Though the first aqueduct, built around 300 B.C., was only 11 miles long, by the end of the third century A.D., Rome was supplied by eleven aqueducts, totaling more than 250 miles in length.
3    Water Power
Vitruvius, the godfather of Roman engineering, describes several pieces of technology that the Romans used for water power.
Combining Greek technologies like the toothed gear and the water wheel, Romans were able to develop advanced sawmills, flourmills and turbines.
The undershot wheel, another Roman invention, rotated under the force of flowing (rather than falling) water, making it possible to build floating waterwheels to grind grain supplies.
This came in handy during the siege of Rome in 537 A.D., when the defending general, Belisarius, solved the problem of the Gothic siege cutting off food supplies by building several floating mills on the Tiber to keep the populace supplied with bread.
Strangely, archaeological evidence suggests that though Romans had the mechanical expertise necessary to build all sorts of water-powered devices, they did so only rarely, preferring cheap and widely available slave labor instead.
Nonetheless, their watermill at Barbegal (in what is now France) was one of the largest industrial complexes in the ancient world before the Industrial Revolution, with 16 waterwheels to grind flour for the surrounding communities.
2    The Segmental Arch
Like almost all of the engineering feats we've listed, the Romans didn't invent the arch -- but they sure did perfect it.
Arches had been around for nearly two thousand years before the Romans got a hold of them.
What Roman engineers realized (quite brilliantly, as it turned out) was that arches need not be continuous; that is, they don't have to span a gap in one go.
Instead of trying to cross gaps in one great leap, they could be broken up into several, smaller sections.
Turning an arch into a perfect semicircle wasn't necessary so long as each section had struts underneath. That's where the segmental arch came in.
This new form of arch-building had two distinct advantages.
First, because the arches could be repeated rather than having a single stretch across a gap, the potential distance for a bridge span could be increased exponentially.
Second, because less material was required, segmental arch bridges were more amenable to the flow of water underneath them.
Instead of forcing water through a single small opening, water under segmented bridges could flow through freely, reducing both danger of flooding and the amount of wear on the supports.
1    Pontoon Bridges
Roman engineering was mostly synonymous with military engineering.
Those roads that they're so famous for weren't built so much for day-to-day use (though they were, of course, useful for that) as for marching legions quickly into the countryside, hitting trouble spots and getting out again.
Roman-designed pontoon bridges, constructed mostly during wartime for the shock and awe of quick raids, served the same purpose and were a specialty of Julius Caesar's.
In 55 B.C., he built a pontoon bridge that was around 437 yards (400 meters) long to cross the Rhine river, which was traditionally thought by the Germanic tribes to be safely out of reach of Roman power.
Caesar's Rhine bridge was clever for a couple of reasons.
Building a bridge without diverting a river is notoriously difficult to do, and even more so in a military setting where construction must be guarded at all times, so engineers had to work fast.
Rather than driving beams straight into the river, engineers rammed timbers into the bottom of the river at an angle against the current, lending the foundation extra strength.
Protective pilings were also driven in upstream to catch or slow down any potentially destructive logs that might float down the river.
Finally, the beams were lashed together, and a wooden bridge was built on top of it.
In total, the construction took only ten days, used entirely local lumber and sent a firm message to local tribes about the power of Rome: if Caesar wanted to cross the Rhine, he could do it.
There's also the possibly apocryphal story of Caligula's (yes, that Caligula) pontoon bridge built across the sea between Baiae and Puzzuoli, a roughly 2.5-mile (4-kilometer) span.
Supposedly, Caligula commissioned the bridge because a soothsayer had prophesied that he had roughly the same chance of becoming emperor as he did of crossing the bay of Baiae on a horse.
Never one to practice restraint, Caligula allegedly took it as a dare, lashed a chain of boats together, covered them with dirt and went for a ride.


 The sprawling aqueduct in Segovia, Spain, is a splendid example of Roman architectural prowess.

They came, they saw, they built some domes. The Pantheon is a pretty fabulous example of how the Romans conquered interior space.The ancient Romans built the first versions of this siege weapon, the onager.With the help of water wheels and other technologies, the ancient Romans harnessed the power of water to their advantage.

We take concrete for granted (especially when it's under our feet), but, as the Romans knew, it's a remarkable building material.Some Roman hypocausts are still (mostly) intact. These were discovered beneath the city of Chester, England, in 2008.Pilgrims cross the Ganges river on a modern-day pontoon bridge in India.

Saturday, September 29, 2018

DISTRACTED DRIVING HABITS - Distracted driving has been called "the new drunk driving." Distractions inside our vehicles abound. For many professionals, their car, truck or SUV is truly their office on wheels. For younger drivers, the car continues to serve as a social hub as it has for decades. But now vehicles are not just a mobile party; they've also become a spot to place calls and send texts -- all too often with deadly consequences.


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Distracted Driving Habits
While your attention is focused on that toned hardbody strutting along the sidewalk, there's plenty of time for a cell phone-occupied driver to cut in front of you without looking.

10 Most Dangerous Distracted Driving Habits

BY AKWELI PARKER

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It's probably safe to reason the 18-year-old man didn't leave the house with intentions to kill someone that day.
As he went about his business, he casually held his car's steering wheel in one hand and a cell phone in the other. He certainly hadn't planned on running that red light.
That was when a semi-tractor trailer swerved to avoid clobbering his car.
Instead of hitting the negligent driver, the rig plowed directly into the vehicle carrying Jacy Good and her parents, Jean and Jay Good.
The trio was returning from Jacy's 2008 graduation from Muhlenberg College near Allentown, Pa.
Jacy's parents were killed instantly.
She was critically injured and endured agonizing rehabilitation sessions to regain her speech and her ability to do just the simplest of tasks.
The Goods' story is just one of thousands each year of the pain inflicted by distracted driving.
It's no wonder that "distracted driving" has been called "the new drunk driving" [source: The Economist].
Distractions inside our vehicles abound. For many professionals, their car, truck or SUV is truly their office on wheels.
For younger drivers, the car continues to serve as a social hub as it has for decades.
But now vehicles are not just a mobile party; they've also become a spot to place calls and send texts -- all too often with deadly consequences.
Every day, distracted driving kills more than 15 people and injures more than 1,200 [source: Centers for Disease Control].
The purpose of this article isn't to scold busy drivers or hasten the dawn of a vehicular nanny state.
Instead, it simply lays out some of the most dangerous habits that distract drivers -- habits that you might not even guess to be all that risky. As the saying goes, forewarned is forearmed.
So start arming yourself for safer driving by reading the No. 10 habit on our list of Most Dangerous Distracted Driving Habits.
10 Eating and Drinking
Compared to some of the other distracted driving habits on our list, this one might seem relatively tame.
After all, it doesn't demand all that much cognitive horsepower to stuff your gullet while on the move.
But before you get too enamored of underway refueling, consider some of the things that could go wrong:
·       You could spill scalding coffee on your lap
·       That breakfast sausage muffin or deluxe burger could collapse in your hands, sending crumbs, sauce and patty pieces all over your work outfit
·       Greasy hands or one-handed driving means less control of the steering wheel and shifter
In each of these cases, drivers face a potential domino effect where impaired attention plus an unexpected event lead to loss of control.
Solution: Eat before or after you get behind the wheel; to chow down during your drive places you and others at risk.
Next up, could vanity cause an automotive calamity?
DRIVING DISTRACTIONS
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration identifies three distinct types of driving distraction:
·     Visual -- not watching where you're going
·     Manual -- taking your hand or hands off the wheel
·     Cognitive -- allowing your mind to drift from the task of driving [Source: Distraction.gov]
9   Applying Makeup or Grooming
We treat it almost as a joke: the harried office worker who slogs through morning rush hour while painting her face; the road warrior who uses drive time as shaving time.
There's even a conveniently placed "vanity mirror" in the fold-down visor right above the windscreen to facilitate this morning ritual.
As usual, the blamed culprit is shortage of time. With our schedules more compressed than ever, the car or SUV might seem like the perfect place to take care of less mentally taxing tasks such as personal grooming.
But there's little arguing with the science on distracted driving.
All but a small percentage (between 2 and 3 percent) of the population experience a noticeable decline in performance when they try to do two or more things at once [source: Watson and Strayer].
You may have gotten away with eyebrow plucking on the interstate up until now, but just remember that it's always a gamble.
Continue on to find out how our furry little companions compound our risk on the road.
8   Tending to Fido or Kitty
Clawing their way in at No. 8, as you may have guessed, are pets. Next to kids, or perhaps in lieu of kids, pets are the collective apples of our eye.
Circumstances dictate that sometimes we want to, or have to, transport them.
The reason could be a veterinarian visit, a move to a different home or maybe just a trip to the park or beach outside of walking distance.
In any case, the last thing you need is an animal roaming around inside your vehicle while you drive.
For the same reasons you wouldn't want people shuffling around the cramped passenger compartment, pets should be secured. It's safer for them, you and others outside your vehicle.
Fortunately, there are carriers for cats and other small pets.
For larger dogs, you can try vehicle partitions or even doggy harnesses that strap your canine securely into a seat. That way he can enjoy the wind in his face without getting fur and slobber in yours.
The proper securing device, coupled with your reassuring words and caresses, should make riding in the car a tolerable and perhaps downright enjoyable experience for your pet.
And unlike our next subject, pets don't require expensive video games or other electronics to remain settled.
7   Keeping an Eye on the Kids
The little bundles of joy can be anything but if they don't have distractions of their own to while away time in the car.
Whether it's two or more young ones squabbling or a lone infant protesting to be released from a restrictive child safety seat, you do not want to divert your attention from the road to indulge them.
According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, passengers are ranked by drivers as among the most frequent causes of distraction.
Young children are four times as distracting as adults, while infants can be a whopping eight times more distracting, the AAA Foundation reports.
Think carefully, though, about stealing a few seconds' glance to investigate while at cruising speed.
It takes only a fraction of a second for a road-borne hazard to enter your vehicle's collision zone and precipitate a disaster.
For the sake of everyone involved, if the little ones' screaming is about to force you to turn around and go back there -- pull over first.
6   Driving While Drowsy
It was a late night. Maybe you figured, "I didn't drink any alcohol, I'll be fine."
But not long after getting behind the wheel, it felt as if your eyelids were anchored with five-pound weights.
No matter how loudly you blasted the stereo or how many windows you rolled down, Mr. Sandman relentlessly seduced you to join him.
If that's ever happened to you and you're still here to read this, you're lucky. You're also not alone.
Nearly 41 percent of drivers say they've fallen asleep behind the wheel at some point or another, according to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.
The NHTSA estimates drowsy driving in the United States causes 100,000 crashes a year, resulting in 40,000 injuries and 1,550 deaths [source: NHTSA].
Of course, it's not always convenient or safe to pull over and catch a few winks.
Perhaps you don't think you need or can afford a night at a hotel or motel. But considering the alternative -- death -- it seems reasonable to consider it a non-discretionary purchase.
We go from mental shutdown to sensory overload with our next distraction. Continue to the next page to see why some people can't seem to keep their eyes on the road.
5   Fiddling with Entertainment and Onboard Electronics
Just because manufacturers and aftermarket companies make high-tech gadgets you can play with while driving doesn't mean you should.
Wisely, in-car DVD players are set by the factory to only play in view of the driver when the vehicle is parked.
While that setting doesn't stop determined mobile multitaskers, at least it sends the message: The people who made these things think it's a bad idea to watch DVDs and drive at the same time.
Regular and satellite radios, iPod adaptors and navigation systems can all be deadly digital devices, in the wrong hands.
To prevent your love affair with gadgets from becoming a fatal attraction, pull over if a gizmo requires you to focus on a screen and remove your eyes from the road.
There's nothing wrong with In-Car Entertainment (ICE) in and of itself. But drivers need to know when to draw the line so that they don't wind up on a cold slab.
Many of us confess to taking a certain amount of guilty pleasure in rubbernecking. But can overindulging lead to a broken neck or worse? Continue on to find out.
4   Watching Roadside Diversions
Billboards are now animated and practically dare you to try not looking at them.
Elsewhere, the hazard might be roadside bombshells -- like if you happen to be cruising through South Beach.
We humans are hardwired to notice the extraordinary.
In our earliest days, the unusual could have represented an animal that wanted us for lunch or even a potential mate from another tribe who could diversify the genes of our offspring.
One big difference between now and then was that we didn't have the ability to hurtle ourselves across the landscape faster than even a cheetah.
At 55 miles per hour (88.5 kilometers per hour), a car can cover half the length of a football field in about 4 seconds.
So while your attention is focused on that toned hardbody strutting along the sidewalk, there's plenty of time for a cell phone-occupied driver to cut in front of you without looking.
While, arguably, our ancient hardwiring makes women better-suited to vehicular multitasking in the modern era, it's dangerous to divide your attention (hence your reaction time) among multiple activities behind the wheel, no matter what your gender.
One of the best -- or perhaps worst -- examples of this is our next distracted driving habit. It's guaranteed to push your buttons, so click to the next page to find out more.
3   Texting and Updating Social Media
OMG -- were you actually surprised by this one? Here's a stat that's nothing to LOL about -- you're 23 times more likely to crash if you text while driving [source: Distraction.gov].
Prior to the 2000s, this distraction would not have even made the list.
But with proliferating technology and social media platforms, it's become one of the worst collective weapons of mass distraction with which we have to contend.
It takes about five seconds of attention to a screen and keyboard to send a brief text.
Disturbingly, 77 percent of young adult drivers say they can safely drive while texting [source: stoptextsstopwrecks.org].
In actuality, distracted driving accidents, including those caused by the use of handheld devices, collectively form the No. 1 killer of teens, according to the NHTSA and others.
While it's convenient to blame our problems on technology, sometimes it's quite apparent that the issue really lies with us.
To see how having a head in the clouds might put a person underground, go on to the next page.
2   Daydreaming
Driving can be an opportune time to organize your thoughts, clear your mind, think through problems or just enjoy a few moments of solitude.
With experience, routine driving becomes an automatic activity in and of itself.
Like brushing our teeth, we don't really have to think about the intricately coordinated choreography of our senses and muscles while driving.
So we might think we have plenty of processing power left over to focus on non-driving related tasks. And that can be dangerous, if we overestimate our powers of focus.
If you've ever let your mind wander and missed your exit on the highway -- then considered swerving across several lanes to catch it -- you're probably aware of the risk posed by daydreaming.
The fact is driving a car equates to operating heavy machinery.
Just as you wouldn't expect a crane operator to drift off while hoisting tons of metal beams overhead, responsible driving means maintaining focus.
Not only is it a courtesy to your fellow drivers, but it helps you to spot and avoid crazies on the road!
So what's our No. 1 driving distraction? This one has really stirred passions, on both sides of the distracted driving debate.
Continue to the next page to see what all the talk is about.
1   Talking on the Phone
Ringing in at the top spot on our list: talking on the phone. This dubious honor goes to the granddaddy of distracted driving, the now-ubiquitous cell phone.
Ever since Wall Street titans and wannabe titans wielded the gigantic brick phones of the 1980s, our obsession with mobile communication has gotten us in trouble behind the wheel.
Driving under the influence of a cell phone, be it handheld or hands-free, impairs driver reaction to the same level as being at the legal limit for blood alcohol content of .08 [source: stoptextsstopwrecks.org].
Hands-free headsets appear to reduce the risk somewhat -- instead of both cognitive and manual impairment as you have with a handheld device, hands-free units only tie up your mental capabilities; in some jurisdictions, they're mandatory for people who talk on the phone while they drive.
Studies suggest that talking on a cell phone roughly quadruples a person's risk of being involved in a crash [source: AAA Foundation].
How could something that seems so innocuous be so deadly? Once again, it lies in the brain's ability to truly do only one thing at a time.
We've become such masters at task switching that we create the illusion of successfully doing two or more things simultaneously.
But throw a surprise into the mix, like a child darting into traffic or a slamming of the brakes by the car in front of us, and the brain can quickly fail to keep pace.
So there you have it -- 10 of the most dangerously distracting habits you can engage in while driving.
While you might have a greater awareness of the risks now, just remember that many people don't. So be safe out there.

 Nearly 41 percent of drivers say they've fallen asleep behind the wheel at some point or another, according to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.
Studies suggest that talking on a cell phone while driving roughly quadruples a person's risk of being involved in a crash.