1.阅读理解

Applied Ethics

Although ethics classes are common around the world, scientists are unsure if their lessons can actually change behavior; evidence either way is weak, relying on contrived laboratory tests or sometimes unreliable self-reports. But a new study published in Cognition found that, in at least one real-world situation, a single ethics lesson may have had lasting effects.

The researchers investigated one class session's impact on eating meat. According to study co-author Eric Schwitzgebel, a philosopher at the University of California, Riverside: students' attitudes on the topic are variable and unstable, behavior is easily measurable, and ethics literature largely agrees that eating less meat is good because it reduces environmental harm and animal suffering. Half of the students in four large philosophy classes read an article on the ethics of factory-farmed meat, optionally watched an 11-minute video on the topic and joined a 50-minute discussion. The other half focused on charitable giving instead. Then, unbeknownst to the students, the researchers studied their anonymized meal-card purchases for that semester — nearly 14,000 receipts for almost 500 students. "It's an awesome data set," says Nina Strohminger, a psychologist who teaches business ethics at the University of Pennsylvania and was not involved in the study.

Schwitzgebel predicted the intervention would have no effect; he had previously found that ethics professors do not differ from other professors on a range of behaviors, including voting rates, blood donation and returning library books. But among student subjects who discussed meat ethics, meal purchases containing meat decreased from 52 to 45 percent — and this effect held steady for the study's duration of several weeks. Purchases from the other group remained at 52 percent.

"That's actually a pretty large effect for a pretty small intervention." Schwitzgebel says. Strohminger agrees: "The thing that still blows my mind is that the only thing that's different between these two cases is just that one day in class." She says she wants the effect to be real but cannot rule out some unknown confounding variable. And if real. Strohminger notes, it might be reversible by another nudge: "Easy come, easy go."

Schwitzgebel suspects the greatest impact came from social influence — classmates or teaching assistants leading the discussions may have shared their own vegetarianism, showing it as achievable or more common. Second, the video may have had an emotional impact. Least rousing, he thinks, was rational argument, although his co-authors say reason might play a bigger role. Now the researchers are probing the specific effects of teaching style, teaching assistants' eating habits and students' video exposure. Meanwhile Schwitzgebel who had predicted no effect — will be eating his words.

(1)  Paragraph 2 is mainly about ____. A. Research reasons and process B. Research subjects and findings C. Research topic and significance D. Research data collection and analysis
(2) Which of the following doesn't lead to the researchers' investigation into meat-eating among students? A. Students' knowledge of the topic. B. Students' easily-measured behaviors. C. Students' changeable and unsteady attitudes. D. Students' unawareness of ethics lessons' impact.
(3) What does the underlined phrase "blows my mind" in Paragraph 4 probably mean? A. Convinces me. B. Upsets me. C. Alarms me. D. Amazes me.
(4)  What is the main purpose of the passage? A. To prove Schwitzgebel's prediction is wrong. B. To show teaching works in behavior changing. C. To explain students are easy to make a change. D. To justify investigation into ethics is worthwhile.
【考点】
推理判断题; 词义猜测题; 细节理解题; 段落大意; 说明文; 科普类;
【答案】

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阅读理解 未知 普通
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1. 阅读理解

Plastic, which is now common, contains endocrine-disrupting chemicals, or EDCs (内分泌干扰物), that has been linked to increased risk of many chronic diseases. Parental exposure to EDCs, for example, has been shown to cause metabolic (新陈代谢的) disorders, including obesity and diabetes, in the later generations.

Led by Changcheng Zhou, a professor of biomedical sciences in the School of Medicine at the University of California, the researchers investigated the impact of fathers' exposure to a phthalate called dicyclohexyl phthalate, or DCHP (邻苯二甲酸二环己酯), on the metabolic health of first generation (F1) and second generation (F2) in mice. Phthalates are chemicals used to make plastic more durable.

The researchers found that fathers' DCHP exposure for four weeks led to high insulin (胰岛素) resistance and impaired insulin signaling in F1. The same effect, but weaker, was seen in F2.

"We found fathers' exposure to EDCs may have intergenerational and transgenerational detrimental effects on the metabolic health of their later generations," Zhou said. "To the best of our knowledge, our study is the first to demonstrate this."

In the case of fathers' exposure in the study, intergenerational effects are changes that occur due to direct exposure to a stressor, such as exposure to DCHP of fathers (FO generation) and his Fl generation. Transgenerational effects are changes passed down to later generations that are not directly exposed to the stressor (for example, F2 generation).

"This suggests that fathers' DCHP exposure can lead to sex-specific transgenerational effects on the metabolic health of their later generations," Zhou said.

Zhou stressed that the impact of exposure to DCHP on human health is not well understood, even though DCHP is widely used in a variety of plastic products and has been detected in food, water, and indoor particulate matter.

"It's best to minimize our use of plastic products," Zhou said. "This can also help reduce plastic pollution, one of our most pressing environmental issues."

(1) Why are phthalates added to plastic? A. To make it long-lasting. B. To beautify it. C. To reduce its cost. D. To increase its weight.
(2) What does the underlined word "detrimental" in paragraph 4 probably mean? A. Distinct. B. External. C. Negative. D. Adventurous.
(3) What did Zhou advise people to do? A. Bury plastic waste. B. Use fewest plastic products. C. Watch out for the food they eat. D. Never produce plastic products.
(4) What can be a suitable title for the text? A. Plastic contains endocrine-disrupting chemicals B. Plastic pollution is a pressing environmental issue C. DCHP is widely used in a variety of plastic products D. Chemicals in plastic may impact two generations' health
阅读理解 未知 困难
2.阅读理解

Since last March, I have been visiting a pet clinic because of my cat Eddie. The clinic is in northern Massachusetts, about two hours from our home on Cape Cod. I expected it would be terrible depressing but it's just the opposite. I have been so surprised at what I have learned there.

Now I believe happiness is something to love in any form. If I've ever know an angel, it is Keri, Eddie's technician. Both Eddie and I are under her loving care. She gives Eddie his medicines. She gives me emotional guidance as well.

I can offer tell when it's someone's first visit. They're usually crying. I think the reason why the rest of us don't cry has nothing to do with hope. I think it has to do with another ingredient of happiness. When we think about our pet's distant future, even if they're healthy, will feel sad. Keri, in her prayerful voice says, "Focus on loving Eddie right now." "Right now" is the only way people think at her clinic.

Instant connection is what happens in the waiting room. We join together to tenderly life a lame dog. We take turns distracting a cat with sparkly toys so she doesn't chew her bandage. Nobody asks for help. Everybody offers. We just do it.

When the end of life is very near, owners often believe their pet's happiness is more important than something like a strict diet. A young fellow whose pet dog suffers from canner says, "He can have anything he wants now." So I guess an element of happiness is not so much the length of a life but the joy and peace that life contains.

At this place, the focus is not on dying, and it's not on living. The focus, for pets and for people, is on living happily.

(1) What does Keri stress most according to Paragraph 3? A. Living is happy. B. Time is precious. C. Hope is certain. D. Love is everything.
(2) What does instant connection in the waiting area wean? A. They live in harmony. B. They help each other. C. They are full of love. D. They ask for help.
(3) Why does a young fellow have his pet eat anything it wants? A. He wants his pet to gain weight. B. He likes to do whatever he wants. C. An Lovely Angel of a Pet Clinic. D. The Ingredients of Happiness.
(4) 下划线focus on 和下边那个短语意思相近? A. concentrate on B. stare at C. contribute to D. devote to 
阅读理解 常考题 普通
3.阅读理解

A team in Norway recently conducted in-depth research on writing by hand and typing on a keyboard.

The team invited 36 university students who had to either write or type words displayed on a screen. The study participants used a digital pen to write in cursive(草书)on a touchscreen, and they used one finger on a keyboard to type. The researchers used a special cap with 256 sensors. This cap was worn by the students, and their brain activity was recorded for five seconds each time they were asked to write or type.

"We show that when writing by hand, brain connectivity patterns are far more complex than when typewriting on a keyboard," says Professor Audrey van der Meer, the team leader. "Such widespread brain connectivity is known to be important for memory formation and for encoding(编码)new information and, therefore, is beneficial for learning." The researchers also note that even though the participants used digital pens for writing in the study, they believe the findings would be similar if the participants used an ink pen and paper.

"We've shown that the differences in brain activity are related to the careful forming of the letters when writing by hand while making more use of the senses. Since it's the movement of the fingers carried out when forming letters that promotes brain connectivity, writing in print also has similar benefits for learning as cursive writing," Audrey adds. "This also explains why children who have learned to write and read on a tablet can have difficulty differentiating between letters that are mirror images of each other, such as ‘b' and ‘d'. They haven't felt with their bodies what it feels like to produce those letters."

Considering handwritten note-taking is becoming less common in educational settings, the researchers advocate for more opportunities for students to write by hand. "There's some evidence that students learn more and remember better when taking handwritten lecture notes, while using a computer with a keyboard may be more pragmatic when writing a long text or essay," Audrey concludes.

(1) What was the special cap used to do? A. Measure the participants' brain activity. B. Evaluate the participants' writing styles. C. Tell the participants when to write or type. D. Record the time the participants used to write.
(2)  What does paragraph 3 focus on about the study? A. Its backgrounds. B. Its equipment. C. Its outcomes. D. Its process.
(3)  What plays the key role in strengthening brain connectivity? A. Recognizing letters' mirror images. B. Learning to practice cursive writing. C. Forming the habit of taking notes. D. Writing letters carefully by hand.
(4) What does the underlined word "pragmatic" in the last paragraph mean? A. Difficult. B. Traditional. C. Special. D. Practical.
阅读理解 未知 困难