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Correct answer: A secondary carbocation adjacent to a carbon bearing a methyl group, which can rearrange to a more stable tertiary cation
Carbocation rearrangements (1,2-hydride or 1,2-alkyl shifts) occur when they convert a less stable cation into a more stable one. A secondary carbocation positioned next to a carbon bearing additional alkyl substitution (e.g. a methyl-substituted ring carbon) will undergo a 1,2-shift to generate a tertiary carbocation, which is more stable. An already-tertiary, symmetric, or resonance-stabilized cation has no driving force to rearrange. Hence the secondary-to-tertiary case is the one expected to rearrange.