【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)-试卷185及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)-试卷 185 及答案解析(总分:70.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:7,分数:70.00)1.Section II Reading Comprehension(分数:10.00)_2.Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D.(分数:10.00)_Like the flu, a person“s emotional state can be con
2、tagious. Watch someone cry, and you“ll likely feel sad; think about the elderly, and you“ll tend to walk slower. Now a study suggests that we can also catch someone else“s irrational thought processes. Anyone who“s lost money on a house in need of repair may have suc-cumbed to a classic economic fal
3、lacy known as “sunk costs.“ You make a bad investment in a home that“s never going to sell for more than you put in to it, yet you want to justify your investment by continuing to throw money into renovations. One way to avoid this hole is to get advice from someone who has no self-interest in the p
4、roject. But is the outsider still somehow susceptible to your mindset? To find out, social psychologist Adam Galinsky of Northwestern University and colleagues asked college students to take over decision-making for a person they had never metand who they didn“t know was fake. The volunteers were sp
5、lit into two groups: one that felt some connection with the decisionmaker and another that didn“t. In one experiment, the volunteers watched the following scenario play out via text on a computer screen: the fake decision-maker tried to outbid another person for a prize of 356 points, which equaled
6、$4.45 in real money. The decision-maker started out with 360 points, and every time the other bidder raised the stakes by 40 points, the decision-maker followed suit. Volunteers were told that once the decision-maker bid over 356 points, he or she would begin to lose some of the $12 payment for part
7、icipating in the study. When the decision-maker neared this threshold, the volunteers were asked to take over bidding. Objectively, the volunteers should have realized thatlike the person who makes a bad investment in a housethe decision-maker would keep throwing good money after bad. But the volunt
8、eers who felt identification with the fake player made almost 60% more bids and were more likely to lose money than those who didn“t feel a connection. Galinsky believes that the results suggest that companies trying to reverse results of bad decisions should find true outsiders. He points to troubl
9、ed automaker Ford as an example. Instead of hiring from withinas General Motors (GM) recently didFord made Alan Mulally from Boeing, an aerospace company, their chief executive officer. Many experts believe that Ford is now recovering quicker than GM. “It“s true that insiders have more knowledge,“ G
10、alinsky says. “But when you are already down the road of a failed course of action, you really need. a true outsider.“(分数:10.00)(1).According to a study, another person“s irrational mindset is characterized as_.(分数:2.00)A.emotionalB.infectiousC.justifiableD.susceptible(2).It“s indicated in Paragraph
11、 2 that a person who has made a bad investment is prone to_.(分数:2.00)A.calculate the costs and profits before making a further stepB.persuade others to believe that he has made a wise decisionC.persist in putting more money into the projectD.consult with some investment experts for advice(3).Which o
12、f the following is true of the experiment conducted by Galinsky?(分数:2.00)A.The participating students turn out susceptible to the mindset of the decision-maker.B.The students were supposed to outbid another person for a prize of 356 points.C.The volunteers each were paid 12 dollars for participating
13、 in the experiment.D.The volunteers actually lost all their payment because they made worse investment.(4).Galinsky“s experiment has found that _.(分数:2.00)A.there is no true outsider because they may catch irrational thought processesB.most investors generally tend to throw good money after bad inve
14、stmentC.people will become irrational after they have lost money in investmentD.some outsiders may still catch the irrational mindset of the decision-makers(5).In the last paragraph, Galinsky suggests that _.(分数:2.00)A.a company should seek help from outsider to reverse the downfallB.Ford out-perfor
15、med General Motors in times of troubleC.outsiders are better decision-makers than insiders to get a recoveryD.a company should use a true outsider to avoid sunk costsYou are what you eat, or so the saying goes. But Richard Wrangham, of Harvard University, believes that this is true in a more profoun
16、d sense than the one implied by the old proverb. It is not just you who are what you eat, but the entire human species. And with Homo sapiens, what makes the species unique in Dr. Wrangham“s opinion is that its food is so often cooked. Cooking is a human universal. No society is without it. No one o
17、ther than a few faddists tries to survive on raw food alone. And the consumption of a cooked meal in the evening, usually in the company of family and friends, is normal in every known society. Moreover, without cooking, the human brain (which consumes 20-25% of the body“s energy) could not keep run
18、ning. Dr. Wrangham thus believes that cooking and humanity have developed alongside. In fact, as he outlined to the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), in Chicago, he thinks that cooking and other forms of preparing food are humanity“s “killer application“: the evolutionary c
19、hange that underpins all of the otherand subsequentchanges that have made people such unusual animals. Humans became human, as it were, with the emergence 1.8 million years ago of a species called Homo erectus. This had a skeleton much like modern man“sa big, brain-filled skull and a narrow pelvis a
20、nd rib cage, which imply a small abdomen and thus a small gut. Hitherto, the explanation for this shift from the smaller skulls and wider pelvises of man“s apelike ancestors has been a shift from a vegetable-based diet to a meat-based one. Meat has more calories than plant matter, the theory went. A
21、.smaller gut could therefore support a larger brain. Dr. Wrangham disagrees. When you do the sums, he argues, raw meat is still insufficient to bridge the gap. He points out that even modern “raw foodists“, members of a town-dwelling, back-to-nature social movement, struggle to maintain their weight
22、and they have access to animals and plants that have been bred for the table. Pre-agricultural man confined to raw food would have starved.Start cooking, however, and things change radically. Cooking alters food in three important ways. It breaks starch molecules into more digestible fragments. It “
23、denatures“ protein molecules, so that their amino-acid chains unfold and digestive enzymes can attack them more easily. And heat physically softens food. That makes it easier to digest, so even though the stuff is no more calorific, the body uses fewer calories dealing with it.(分数:10.00)(1).It can b
24、e inferred from the first paragraph that_.(分数:2.00)A.what you eat exerts little impact on who you areB.the food makes Homo sapiens different from othersC.Homo sapiens often cooked its foodD.Homo sapiens cook food in a unique way(2).Dr. Wrangham holds the view that _.(分数:2.00)A.cooking is a human uni
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