Ashpine, it's the negation of the condition that translates to the "even if." The conditional itself is written as normal for an unless statement. But in order to negate a conditional, you say the sufficient occurs even if the necessary doesn't.
Let's look at how it works for a simpler example. Take the conditional statement "if it snows, I will stay inside." To negate that we want the opposite idea. That's different than a contrapositive. A contrapositive is the same idea as the original conditional, so you aren't going to take the contrapositive here. You are looking for the logical opposite. A conditional means that if the sufficient occurs, the necessary MUST occur. The logical opposite would be that the sufficient occurs, but the necessary does not. So with this example, it would be it snows but I don't necessarily stay inside.
For answer choice A, we start by looking at the conditional as it is written.
speaking to a driver significantly likely to increase risk of accident speaker is providing helpful warnings.
To negate it, we'd say that it is not required that the speaker provides helpful warnings in order for speaking to the driver to not significantly increase the likelihood of an accident.
If the "even if" language is confusing for you, phrase the original conditional in terms of requirement. To negate that, you'd say the required is not required.
Hope that helps!