




下載本文檔
版權(quán)說明:本文檔由用戶提供并上傳,收益歸屬內(nèi)容提供方,若內(nèi)容存在侵權(quán),請進(jìn)行舉報(bào)或認(rèn)領(lǐng)
文檔簡介
ReadingComprehension(30points,1.5×20)
Directions:Readthefollowingpassagesandchoosethebestanswertocompleteeachstatement.
Then,markyouranswerbyblackeningthecorrespondingletterontheAnswerSheet.
PassageOne
OurculturehascausedmostAmericanstoassumenotonlythatourlanguageisuniversalbut
thatthegesturesweuseareunderstoodbyeveryone.Wedonotrealizethatwavinggood-byeis
thewaytosummonapersonfromthePhilippinestoone’sside,orthatinItalyandsome
Latin-Americancountries,curlingthefingertooneselfisasignoffarewell.
ThoseprivatecitizenswhosentpackagestoourtroopsoccupyingGermanyafterWorldWar
IIandmarkedthemGIFTtoescapedutypaymentsdidnotbothertofindoutthat“Gift”means
poisoninGerman.Moreover,weliketothinkofourselvesasfriendly,yetweprefertobeatleast
3feetoranarm’slengthawayfromothers.LatinsandMiddleEasternersliketocomecloserand
touch,whichmakesAmericansuncomfortable.
Ourlinguisticandculturalblindnessandthecasualnesswithwhichwetakenoticeofthe
developedtastes,gestures,customsandlanguageofothercountries,arelosingusfriends,business
andrespectintheworld.EvenhereintheUnitedStates,wemakefewconcessionstotheneedsof
foreignvisitors.Therearenoinformationsignsinfourlanguagesonourpublicbuildingsor
monuments;wedonothavemultilingualguidedtours.Veryfewrestaurantmenushave
translations,andmultilingualwaiters,bankclerksandpolicemenarerare.Ourtransportation
systemshavemapsinEnglishonlyandoftenweourselveshavedifficultyunderstandingthem.
Whenwegoabroad,wetendtoclusterinhotelsandrestaurantswhereEnglishisspoken.
Theattitudesandinformationwepickupareconditionedbythosenatives—usuallythe
richer—whospeakEnglish.Ourbusinessdealings,aswellasthenation’sdiplomacy,are
conductedthroughinterpreters.
Formanyyears,AmericaandAmericanscouldgetbywithculturalblindnessandlinguistic
ignorance.Afterall,Americawasthemostpowerfulcountryofthefreeworld,thedistributorof
neededfundsandgoods.Butallthatispast.Americandollarsnolongerbuyallgoodthings,and
weareslowlybeginningtorealizethatourproperroleintheworldischanging.A1979Harris
pollreportedthat55percentofAmericanswantthiscountrytoplayamoresignificantrolein
worldaffairs;wewanttohaveahandintheimportantdecisionsofthenextcentury,eventoughit
maynotalwaysbetheupperhand.
1.ItcanbeinferredthatAmericansbeingapproachedtoocloselybyMiddleEasternerswould
mostprobably____________.
A.standstill
B.jumpaside
C.stepforward
D.drawback
2.TheauthorgivesmanyexamplestocriticizeAmericansfortheir_____________.
A.culturalself-centeredness
B.casualmanners
C.indifferencetowardsforeignvisitors
D.arrogancetowardsothercultures
3.IncountriesotherthantheirownmostAmericans___________.
A.areisolatedbythelocalpeople
B.arenotwellinformedduetothelanguagebarrier
C.tendtogetalongwellwiththenatives
D.needinterpretersinhotelsandrestaurants
4.Accordingtotheauthor,American’sculturalblindnessandlinguisticignorancewill_______.
A.affecttheirimageinthenewera
B.cutthemselvesofffromtheoutsideworld
C.limittheirroleinworldaffairs
D.weakenthepositionoftheUSdollar
5.Theauthor’sintentioninwritingthisarticleistomakeAmericansrealizethat________.
A.itisdangeroustoignoretheirforeignfriends
B.itisimportanttomaintaintheirleadingroleinworldaffairs
C.itisnecessarytouseseverallanguagesinpublicplaces
D.itistimetogetacquaintedwithothercultures
PassageTwo
Thedesireforachievementisoneoflife'sgreatmysteries.Socialscientistshavedevoted
lifetimestostudyingthedrivesthatspurusoutofbedinthemorning,compelustoworkorstudy
hardandsparkallmannerofhumanendeavor.Indeed,a1992textbookactuallydocuments32
distincttheoriesofhumanmotivation.Givenhisdiversityofthought,it'seasytoforgetthatfora
halfcentury,Americansocietyhasbeendominatedbythepsychologicalschoolknownas
behaviorism,orSkinnerianpsychology.Althoughbehaviorismanditsfundamentalprincipleof
"positivereinforcement"havelongsincelosttheirswayinacademiccircles,theSkinnerianlegacy
remainspowerfuliseveryrealmofdailylife,fromthehomeandclassroomtotheworkplace.
Don'twanttotakethetrashout?DoitandyoucangotothemoviesFridaynight.Notinthe
moodforwork?Keeppluggingaway,andyoumightgetabonus.Notinterestedincalculus?
StriveforanAintheclass,andyou'llmakethehonorroll.Thetheorymaybebankrupt,but
incentivesandrewardsaresomuchapartofAmericanculturethatit'shardtoimaginelifewithout
them.
Yetthat'sexactlywhatagrowinggroupofresearchersareadvocatingtoday.Asteadystream
ofresearchhasfoundthatratherthanencouragingmotivationandproductivity,rewardsactually
canunderminegenuineinterestanddiminishperformance.“Oursocietyiscaughtinawhopping
paradox,”assertsAlfieKohn,authorofthenewbookPunishedbyRewards(HoughtonMifflin),
whichsurveysrecentresearchontheeffectivenessofrewards.“Wecomplainloudlyabout
decliningproductivity,thecrisisofourschoolandthedistortedvaluesofourchildren.Butthe
verystrategyweusetosolvethoseproblems—danglingrewardslikeincentiveplansandgrade
andcandybarsinfrontofpeople—ispartlyresponsibleforthefixwe'rein.”
It'stoughargumenttomakeinaculturethatcelebratesthespoilsofsuccess.Yetstudyafter
studyshowsthatpeopletendtoperformworse,togiveupmoreeasilyandtoloseinterestmore
quicklywhenarewardisinvolved.Childrenwhoaregiventreatsfordoingartwork,forexample,
losetheirinitialloveofartwithinweeks.Teenagerswhoarepromisedarewardfortutoring
youngstersdon'tteachasenthusiasticallyastutorsofferednothing.Andchiefexecutiveofficers
whohavebeenawardedlong-termincentiveplanshaveoftensteeredtheircompaniestoward
lowerreturns.
6.Accordingtobehaviorism,allhumanactions________.
A.arebasedonstimulusandresponse
B.havenobearingonhumandrives
C.aresupposedtobehighlymotivated
D.areofagreatmystery
7.Behaviorismbasicallybelievesin__________.
A.motivation
C.rewards
B.performance
D.humanfactors
8.Fromthepassage,itcanbeinferredthat_________.
A.rewardsarehighlyeffectiveinAmerica
B.rewardsarenotmuchsoughtafterinacademiccircles
C.rewardshavelonglosttheirappealinAmericansociety
D.Americansareaddictedtorewards
9.Thechildren’sbehaviorinthelastparagraph_______.
A.canbebestexplainedinbehaviorism
B.canbelinkedtoPavlov’sdogs
C.showsthatrewardsmaywellkilldesire
D.servetoprovidedevidencetobehaviorism
10.Whichofthefollowingisinsupportofthefindingthat“peopletendtoperformworse,…
whenarewardisinvolved”(lastparagraph)?
A.Peoplearenotusedtobeingconditionedbyprizes.
B.Rewards,likepunishments,areattemptstocontrolbehavior.
C.RewardsaresoindispensabletoAmericancultures.
D.Theprincipleof“positivereinforcement”innotfullyenforced.
PassageThree
Inthe1950s,thepioneersofartificialintelligence(AI)predictedthat,bytheendofthis
century,computerswouldbeconversingwithusatworkandrobotswouldbeperformingour
housework.Butasusefulascomputersare,they’renowhereclosetoachievinganythingremotely
resemblingtheseearlyaspirationsforhumanlikebehavior.Nevermindsomethingascomplexas
conversation:themostpowerfulcomputersstruggletoreliablyrecognizetheshapeofanobject,
themostelementaryoftasksforaten-month-oldkid.
AgrowinggroupofAIresearchersthinktheyknowwherethefieldwentwrong.Theproblem,
thescientistssay,isthatAIhasbeentryingtoseparatethehighest,mostabstractlevelsofthought,
likelanguageandmathematics,andtoduplicatethemwithlogical,step-by-stepprograms.Anew
movementinAI,ontheotherhand,takesacloserlookatthemoreroundaboutwayinwhich
naturecameupwithintelligence.Manyoftheseresearchersstudyevolutionandnatural
adaptationinsteadofformallogicandconventionalcomputerprograms.Ratherthandigital
computersandtransistors,somewanttoworkwithbraincellsandproteins.Theresultsofthese
earlyeffortsareaspromisingastheyarepeculiar,andthenewnature-basedAImovementis
slowlybutsurelymovingtotheforefrontofthefield.
Imitatingthebrain'sneuralnetworkisahugestepintherightdirection,sayscomputer
scientistandbiophysicistMichaelConrad,butitstillmissesanimportantaspectofnatural
intelligence.“Peopletendtotreatthebrainasifitweremadeupofcolor-codedtransistors”,he
explains,“butit’snotsimplyaclevernetworkofswitches.Therearelotsofimportantthings
goingoninsidethebraincellsthemselves.”Specifically,Conradbelievesthatmanyofthebrain’s
capabilitiesstemfromthepatternrecognitionproficiencyoftheindividualmoleculesthatmake
upeachbraincell.Thebestwaytobuildanartificiallyintelligentdevice,heclaims,wouldbeto
builditaroundthesamesortofmolecularskills.
Rightnow,theoptionthatconventionalcomputersandsoftwarearefundamentallyincapable
ofmatchingtheprocessesthattakeplaceinthebrainremainscontroversial.Butifitprovestrue,
thentheeffortsofConradandhisfellowAIrebelscouldturnouttobetheonlygameintown.
11.Theauthorsaysthatthepowerfulcomputersoftoday______.
A.arecapableofreliablyrecognizingtheshapeofanobject
B.areclosetoexhibitinghumanlikebehavior
C.arenotverydifferentintheirperformancefromthoseofthe50’s
D.stillcannotcommunicatewithpeopleinahumanlanguage
12.Thenewtrendinartificialintelligenceresearchstemsfrom______.
A.theshiftofthefocusofstudyontotherecognitionoftheshapesofobjects
B.thebeliefthathumanintelligencecannotbeduplicatedwithlogical,step-by-step
programs
C.theaspirationsofscientiststoduplicatetheintelligenceofaten-month-oldchild
D.theeffortsmadebyscientistsinthestudyofthesimilaritiesbetweentransistorsand
braincells
13.ConradandhisgroupofAIresearchershavebeenmakingenormouseffortsto______.
A.findaroundaboutwaytodesignpowerfulcomputers
B.buildacomputerusingaclevernetworkofswitches
C.findouthowintelligencedevelopedinnature
D.separatethehighestandmostabstractlevelsofthought
14.What’stheauthor’sopinionaboutthenewAImovement?
A.Ithascreatedasensationamongartificialintelligenceresearchersbutwillsoondieout.
B.It’sabreakthroughinduplicatinghumanthoughtprocesses.
C.It’smorelikeapeculiargameratherthanarealscientificeffort.
D.Itmayprovetobeintherightdirectionthoughnobodyissureofitsfutureprospects.
15.Whichofthefollowingisclosestinmeaningtothephrase"theonlygameintown"(inthe
lastsentenceofthispassage)?
A.Theonlyapproachtobuildinganartificiallyintelligentcomputer.
B.Theonlywayforthemtowinaprizeinartificialintelligenceresearch.
C.Theonlyareaworthstudyingincomputerscience.
D.Theonlygametheywouldliketoplayintown.
PassageFour
Nottoomanydecadesagoitseemed"obvious"bothtothegeneralpublicandtosociologists
thatmodernsocietyhaschangedpeople’snaturalrelations,loosenedtheirresponsibilitiestokin
andneighbors,andsubstitutedintheirplacesuperficialrelationshipswithpassingacquaintances.
However,inrecentyearsagrowingbodyofresearchhasrevealedthatthe“obvious”isnottrue.It
seemsthatifyouareacityresident,youtypicallyknowasmallerproportionofyourneighbors
thanyoudoifyouarearesidentofasmallercommunity.But,forthemostpart,thisfacthasfew
significantconsequences.Itdoesnotnecessarilyfollowthatifyouknowfewofyourneighbors
youwillknownooneelse.
Eveninverylargecities,peoplemaintainclosesocialtieswithinsmall,privatesocialworlds.
Indeed,thenumberandqualityofmeaningfulrelationshipsdonotdifferbetweenmoreandless
urbanpeople.Small-townresidentsaremoreinvolvedwithkinthanarebig-cityresidents.Yetcity
dwellerscompensatebydevelopingfriendshipswithpeoplewhosharesimilarinterestsand
activities.Urbanismmayproduceadifferentstyleoflife,butthequalityoflifedoesnotdiffer
betweentownandcity.Norareresidentsoflargecommunitiesanylikeliertodisplay
psychologicalsymptomsofstressoralienation,afeelingofnotbelonging,thanareresidentsof
smallercommunities.However,citydwellersdoworrymoreaboutcrime,andthisleadsthemtoa
distrustofstrangers.
Thesefindingsdonotimplythaturbanismmakeslittleornodifference.Ifneighborsare
strangerstooneanother,theyarelesslikelytosweepthesidewalkofanelderlycouplelivingnext
doororkeepaneyeoutforyoungtroublemakers.Moreover,asWirthsuggested,theremaybea
linkbetweenacommunity'spopulationsizeanditssocialheterogeneity.Forinstance,sociologists
havefoundmuchevidencethatthesizeofacommunityisassociatedwithbadbehaviorincluding
gambling,drugs,etc.Large-cityurbanitesarealsomorelikelythantheirsmall-towncounterparts
tohaveacosmopolitanoutlook,todisplaylessresponsibilitytotraditionalkinshiproles,tovote
forleftistpoliticalcandidates,andtobetolerantofnontraditionalreligiousgroups,unpopular
politicalgroups,andso-calledun
溫馨提示
- 1. 本站所有資源如無特殊說明,都需要本地電腦安裝OFFICE2007和PDF閱讀器。圖紙軟件為CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.壓縮文件請下載最新的WinRAR軟件解壓。
- 2. 本站的文檔不包含任何第三方提供的附件圖紙等,如果需要附件,請聯(lián)系上傳者。文件的所有權(quán)益歸上傳用戶所有。
- 3. 本站RAR壓縮包中若帶圖紙,網(wǎng)頁內(nèi)容里面會有圖紙預(yù)覽,若沒有圖紙預(yù)覽就沒有圖紙。
- 4. 未經(jīng)權(quán)益所有人同意不得將文件中的內(nèi)容挪作商業(yè)或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文庫網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲空間,僅對用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護(hù)處理,對用戶上傳分享的文檔內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯,并不能對任何下載內(nèi)容負(fù)責(zé)。
- 6. 下載文件中如有侵權(quán)或不適當(dāng)內(nèi)容,請與我們聯(lián)系,我們立即糾正。
- 7. 本站不保證下載資源的準(zhǔn)確性、安全性和完整性, 同時也不承擔(dān)用戶因使用這些下載資源對自己和他人造成任何形式的傷害或損失。
最新文檔
- T-ZGTX 27-2025 原生態(tài)雪域滑雪能力要求規(guī)范
- T-ZSM 0059-2024“領(lǐng)跑者”評價(jià)技術(shù)要求 數(shù)控圓鋸床
- 二零二五年度房屋租賃合同租賃雙方租賃期間租賃物租賃權(quán)法律適用協(xié)議
- 2025年度汽車行業(yè)代理招聘人才合作協(xié)議
- 2025年度餐廳員工勞動合同試用期規(guī)定
- 鋼結(jié)構(gòu)合同補(bǔ)充協(xié)議(2025年度)安裝工程
- 二零二五年度危險(xiǎn)品車輛運(yùn)輸司機(jī)安全責(zé)任協(xié)議
- 2025年度食品飲料經(jīng)銷商授權(quán)及市場開發(fā)協(xié)議
- 二零二五年度借車車輛損失免責(zé)合同
- 二零二五年度雙方個人教育培訓(xùn)合作協(xié)議
- 2024-2025年中國鋰電池隔膜行業(yè)未來發(fā)展趨勢分析及投資規(guī)劃建議研究報(bào)告
- 2024年南昌健康職業(yè)技術(shù)學(xué)院高職單招職業(yè)技能測驗(yàn)歷年參考題庫(頻考版)含答案解析
- 2025浙江中煙招聘高頻重點(diǎn)提升(共500題)附帶答案詳解
- 月子會所護(hù)理人員禮儀
- 校園安全隱患排查培訓(xùn)
- 《化妝品包裝材料相容性試驗(yàn)評估指南》
- 無人機(jī)行業(yè)調(diào)查研究報(bào)告
- 2022版藝術(shù)新課標(biāo)解讀心得(課件)小學(xué)美術(shù)
- 四川政采評審專家入庫考試基礎(chǔ)題復(fù)習(xí)試題
- 鋰離子電池失效分析及后果PFMEA-電子表格版
- 2024解析:第十九章生活用電-基礎(chǔ)練(解析版)
評論
0/150
提交評論