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题型:填空题 题类:常考题 难易度:普通

广西南宁三中2017—2018学年度上学期英语高一上学期11月段考试卷(暂无听力音频)

新概念英语原文填空

    Lesson6: …… Yesterday a beggar  at my door. He asked me for a meal and a glass of beer.  return for this, the beggar stood on his head and sang songs.

    Lesson7: the plane was late and detectives were waiting at the airport all morning. They were  a  parcel of diamond from South Africa.

   Lesson8: …… Bill works harder than Joe and grows more flowers and vegetables,          5     Joe's garden is more interesting. He  neat paths and has built a wooden bridge over a pool.

    Lesson9: On Wednesday evening, we went to the Town Hall. It was the last day of the year and a large  of people had gathered under the Town Hall clock. It would       8       twelve in twenty minutes' time.

    Lesson10: …… Recently it  by a visitor. She tried to play jazz on it! She struck the keys too hard and two of the strings were broken. My father was . Now we are not allowed to touch it. It is being repaired by a friend of my father's.

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阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(不多于3个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

    Many teachers believe that the responsibilities for learning lie with the student. {#blank#}1{#/blank#} a long reading assignment is given, instructors expect students to be familiar with {#blank#}2{#/blank#} (inform) in the reading even if they do not discuss it in class or take an examination. The ideal student is considered to be one who is motivated to learn for the sake of learning, not the one interested only in getting high grades. Sometimes homework is returned {#blank#}3{#/blank#} brief written comments but without a grade. Even if a grade is not given, the student is {#blank#}4{#/blank#} (responsibility) for learning the material assigned. When research {#blank#}5{#/blank#} (assign), the professor expects the student to take it actively and to complete it with minimum guidance. It is the student's responsibility to find books, magazines, and articles in the library. Professors do not have the time to explain {#blank#}6{#/blank#} a university library works; they expect students, {#blank#}7{#/blank#} (especial) graduate students, to be able to exhaust the reference origins in the library. Professors will help students who need it, but prefer that their students should not be too dependent on them. In the United States, professors have many other duties {#blank#}8{#/blank#} teaching, such as administrative or research work. Therefore, the time {#blank#}9{#/blank#} a professor can spend with a student outside of class {#blank#}10{#/blank#} (limit). If a student has problems with classroom work, the student should either approach a professor during office hours or make an appointment.

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    “HELL is a city much like London,” said Percy Bysshe Shelley in 1819. Modern academics agree. Last year Dutch researchers showed that city dwellers (居民) have a 21% higher risk of suffering from anxiety disorders than do their calmer rural countrymen, and a 39% higher risk of suffering from mood disorders. But exactly how the inner workings of the urban and rural minds cause this difference has remained unclear—until now. A study just published in Nature by Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg of the University of Heidelberg and his colleagues has used a scanning technique called functional magnetic-resonance imaging (机能性磁共振成像,简称fMRI) to examine the brains of city dwellers and countrymen when they are under stress.

    In Dr Meyer-Lindenberg's first experiment, participants lying with their heads in a scanner took maths tests that they were bound to fail (the researchers had designed success rates to be just 25-40%). To make the experience still more embarrassing, the team provided negative feedback through headphones, all the while checking participants for indications of stress, such as high blood pressure.

    The city people's general mental health did not differ from that of the rural countrymen. However, their brains dealt with the stress caused by the experimenters in different ways. These differences were noticeable in two regions: the amygdalas (杏仁核) and the perigenual anterior cingulate cortex (前扣带皮层,简称pACC).

    People living in the countryside had the lowest levels of activity in their amygdalas. Those living in towns had higher levels. City dwellers had the highest. In the case of the pACC, however, what mattered was not where someone was living now, but where he or she was brought up. The more urban a person's childhood, the more active his pACC, regardless of where he was dwelling at the time of the experiment.

    The amygdalas thus seem to respond to the here-and-now while the pACC is programmed early on, and does not react in the same, flexible way as the amygdalas. Second-to-second changes in its activity might, though, be expected to be connected with changes in the amygdalas, because of its role in regulating them. fMRI allows such connections to be measured.

    In the cases of those brought up in the countryside, regardless of where they now live, the connections were as expected. For those brought up in cities, however, these connections broke down. The regulatory mechanism of the native urbanite, in other words, seems to be out of order.

    Dr Meyer-Lindenberg and his team conducted several more experiments to check their findings. They asked participants to complete more maths tests—and also tests in which they were mentally ups and downs—while investigators scolded them about their performance. The results matched those of the first test. They also studied another group of volunteers, who were given stress-free tasks to complete. These experiments showed no activity in either the amygdalas or the pACC, suggesting that the earlier results were indeed the result of social stress rather than mental effort.

    As is usually the case in studies of this sort, the sample size was small and the result showed an association, rather than a definite, causal relationship. That association is, nevertheless, interesting. Living in cities brings many benefits, but Dr Meyer-Lindenberg's work suggests that Shelley and his fellow Romantics had at least half a point.

Title: Do urban brains behave differently from rural ones?

Purpose of the research

The research was conducted to explain why city dwellers are more likely to {#blank#}1{#/blank#} serious disorders than countrymen.







Process of the research






Design of the research

The researchers made the participants take difficult maths tests and provided negative feedback, which served as the source of {#blank#}2{#/blank#} for the participants.

Meanwhile the researchers scanned their brains and got indications by a scanning technique called fMRI .

Findings of the research

The activity level in the amygdalas is highest in city dwellers, {#blank#}3{#/blank#} by those living in towns and the countryside. Besides, the amygdalas respond {#blank#}4{#/blank#}.

The activity level of a person's pACC, regulating the amygdalas, is {#blank#}5{#/blank#} by the place where he was raised, and the pACC works when a person is at a {#blank#}6{#/blank#} age.

The association between the amygdalas and the pACC depends on a person's living {#blank#}7{#/blank#}.

{#blank#}8{#/blank#} on the findings

Several more experiments were carried out with {#blank#}9{#/blank#} results.

Conclusion of the research

It is the social stress rather than mental effort that leads to mental disorders, so living in cities also brings some {#blank#}10{#/blank#}.

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