【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)-试卷95及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)-试卷 95 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)_Perhaps the most ambitious long-term health study ev
2、er planned by the National Institutes of Health (NET) has been hit by a NASA style price shock: Once estimated at $3 billion over 25 years, the actual cost could be twice that much. The problem became public last week at a Capitol Hill hearing on the NIH budget. Acting NIH Director Raynard Kington s
3、aid he has launched a high-level re-view of the plan to track the health of 100,000 children from before birth to age 21 and that the study will likely be scaled back. The National Children“s Study (NCS) grew out of a 2000 congressional directive to NIH to determine how environmental influences, fro
4、m chemical contaminants to video games, shape the development of children and affect diseases such as autism and obesity. Researchers plan to recruit a diverse group of pregnant mothers at 105 sites around the United States by knocking on randomly selected doors. Congress provided $192 million in fu
5、nding this year to set up the sites and launch a pilot study. Kington says he became concerned in early January after being informed of his staffs latest cost projections. It was since then that Kington realized “there was a fundamental problem in estimating the true costs.“ In order to turn things
6、around, Kington has now added “greatly heightened oversight.“ That includes asking Claude Lenfant, former director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, to return to NIH as his adviser on the study. NIH will also take a longer pause than originally planned after the 1-year pilot, which b
7、egan in January at two of seven sites, to revise the protocol and reassess the costs. When trimming begins, Kington says he hopes the 100,000 sample size will be “the last thing“ considered for cuts. But the size, number of hypotheses, and the protocols are all on the table. Pediatrician Philip Land
8、rigan, who helped conceive the NCS, hopes not to lose components such as in-home detailed assessments of each child“s development, which are expensive. “We“re just waiting to see how this works out,“ says Landrigan, whose team has knocked on more than 1000 doors in Queens and foundthat many women se
9、em interested. The budget problems come as no surprise to former NIH Director Elias Zerhouni, who wanted to avoid funding for the NCS. Zerhouni says he had “severe reservations“ about the potential cost and felt NIH should complete the pilot before any decisions were made about proceeding with the f
10、ull study. Instead, “Congress interfered“ by providing the money to move ahead anyway. “It was political management,“ Zerhouni says, and “I don“t think people should be shocked“ at the result.(分数:10.00)(1).It can be inferred from Paragraph 1 that the most ambitious long-term health study _.(分数:2.00)
11、A.was planned in a NASA styleB.has met personnel problemsC.will be halted for its huge costD.is very likely to reduce budget(2).National Children“s Study aims to _.(分数:2.00)A.recruit pregnant mothers as main subjects to study the environmentB.confirm 105 sites around the US are suitable for pilot st
12、udiesC.verify whether environmental pollution causes various diseaseD.explore the link between environment and the growth of children(3).After being informed of the latest cost projections, Kington _.(分数:2.00)A.asked his staff to report on the latest cost figuresB.asked Claude Lenfant to resume his
13、post in NTHC.decided that NIH would end the pilot until costs are reevaluatedD.agreed that NIH would take a while to amend the project(4).According to Paragraph 4, which of the following is true of the trimming?(分数:2.00)A.The number of hypotheses would be decreased.B.The sample size would be finaliz
14、ed later on.C.The protocols would be the focus of discussion.D.In-home assessments would be prolonged.(5).Former NIH Director Elias Zerhouni_.(分数:2.00)A.felt it reckless to complete the pilotB.had foreseen such a serious cost problemC.thought it was time to make the final decisionD.maintained that C
15、ongress interference was no goodWhy in an age of advanced technology, should so many people still cling to an ancient belief? In part it must be because astrologyclaims to tell us something about ourselves, and all of us are interested in ourselves. I think it is because astrology is presented as if
16、 it were a science by its modern practitioner, and many people are misled by this. In fact, astrology was never a science. It was not a hypothesis or theory developed to describe natural phenomena, and until fairly recent times, there was not attempt to test or verify its predictions. Astrology bega
17、n approximately three thousand years ago in Babylonia; it was applied to monarchs and kingdoms, but not to individuals. It spread in the 6th century BC as far as India, where it flourishes today. The Egyptians, meanwhile, developed their own kind of astrology. But the astrology now practiced in Euro
18、pe and America is that developed by the Greeks, who synthesized the ideas of the Babylonians and Egyptians and enriched them with concepts from their own fertile imaginations. The Greeks believed that the earth was composed of four elements, and the heavens of a perfect crystalline material. The pla
19、nets themselves were variously thought to be gods, residences of gods, or at least manifestations of gods. The gods were immortal, but otherwise had the same attributes of anger, happiness, jealousy, rage and pleasure as we do. Now if what the gods“ thought was capricious, at least the planets were
20、predictable in their movements. Because our own lot in life is so unpredictable, it must be purely at the mercy of gods. But if the gods are the planets, or somehow associated with them, then we have only to learn the rules of the motions of the planets to understand the whims of the gods and how th
21、ey shape our own lives. So the belief developed that each of our lives is preordained by the precise configuration of the planets in the sky at the time of our birth. Astrology could not, of course, have seemed as incredible to the ancients as it does to us. The role of the sun influencing our daily
22、 and yearly lives is obvious; it was a natural extension to attribute other powers to the other planets as well. It wasn“t until the time of Newton that we understood that the laws of Nature apply to the celestial worlds as well as to the terrestrial one. During antiquity, however, all great scholar
23、s believed in astrology.(分数:10.00)(1).Many people are misled by astrology because it is presented by the practitioners as _.(分数:2.00)A.a theory that can describe natural phenomenaB.a magical key to understanding themselvesC.an ancient belief that had long been applied to monarchsD.a mysterious power
24、 beyond the explanation of science(2).While the Greeks developed astrology, they believed that _.(分数:2.00)A.the earth was made up of four elements and the heavensB.the heavens were made up of a material of pure crystalC.the ideas of the Babylonians were not imaginativeD.their ideas would soon spread
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