题型:阅读理解 题类:模拟题 难易度:普通
黑龙江省齐齐哈尔市2021届高三下学期英语第三次模拟试卷
London-based artist Sarah Ezekiel has won international recognition for her vivid, life-filling images. But her work is more remarkable for the fact that she has a medical condition that has left her unable to move her arms.
Ezekiel's pictures are painstakingly produced, using the movement of her eyes and specialized technology that relays those movements to a computer. The eye-tracking technology gives Ezekiel a platform for artistic expression, otherwise denied by her disease—amyotrophic lateral sclerosis(ALS).
Ezekiel showed no signs of the condition until 2000, when she was aged 34. Pregnant with her second child, she noticed some weakness in her left arm and that she was unable to produce each word clearly. Within months, she was diagnosed with incurable ALS.
Ezekiel describes her first five years living with ALS as "very lonely". Today, she can neither speak nor move but says "technology has made my life worth living". She uses a system made by Tobii Dynavox, a company specializing in "Eye Gaze" devices that help people with medical conditions communicate. Its technology adopts projectors, cameras and algorithms to track the tiny movements of the user's pupils and control a cursor on a screen.
To interview Ezekiel, CNN sent her questions and she prepared her answers letter by letter, using predictive text. The technology also lets her surf the net, shop online and use social media.
Ezekiel, who studied art when she was younger, began painting using the Eye Gaze device in 2012. Her first artwork. Peaceful Warrior, took its title from a book by Dan Millman. "It was originally supposed to illustrate despair, but the finished result had a totally different feel," she recalls.
"Being an artist because of technology has totally improved my general attitude towards life and opened up many other possibilities for me," says Ezekiel. I couldn't create pictures for years and it's fantastic that technology has made it possible again.
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