Research shows that a driver who drives a car at a constant speed travels ``blindly'' (that is, without vision of the road) a distance proportional to the time spent looking at the cell phone while typing the message. Consider that this indeed happens. Suppose that two drivers ($X$ and $Y$) drive at the same constant speed and type the same message on their cell phones. Suppose, further, that the time spent by driver $X$ looking at his cell phone while typing the message corresponds to $25\%$ of the time spent by driver $Y$ to perform the same task. The ratio between the distances traveled blindly by $X$ and $Y$, in that order, is equal to (A) $\frac{5}{4}$ (B) $\frac{1}{4}$ (C) $\frac{4}{3}$ (D) $\frac{4}{1}$ (E) $\frac{3}{4}$
Research shows that a driver who drives a car at a constant speed travels ``blindly'' (that is, without vision of the road) a distance proportional to the time spent looking at the cell phone while typing the message. Consider that this indeed happens. Suppose that two drivers ($X$ and $Y$) drive at the same constant speed and type the same message on their cell phones. Suppose, further, that the time spent by driver $X$ looking at his cell phone while typing the message corresponds to $25\%$ of the time spent by driver $Y$ to perform the same task.
The ratio between the distances traveled blindly by $X$ and $Y$, in that order, is equal to\\
(A) $\frac{5}{4}$\\
(B) $\frac{1}{4}$\\
(C) $\frac{4}{3}$\\
(D) $\frac{4}{1}$\\
(E) $\frac{3}{4}$