大学英语六级-80及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级-80 及答案解析(总分:556.45,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Part Writing(总题数:1,分数:106.00)1.1. 现代社会中竞争无处不在;2. 竞争和合作的关系。(分数:106.00)_二、Part Reading Compr(总题数:1,分数:10.00)Time in the Animal MindHumans are born time travelers. We may not be able to send our bodies into the past or the future, at least not yet, but we can send
2、 our minds. We can relive events that happened long ago or imagine ourselves in the future. New studies suggest that the two directions of time travel are intimately twisted together in the human brain. But some experts on animal behavior do not think we are unique in this respect. They point to sev
3、eral recent experiments suggesting that animals can visit the past and future as well.The first clues about the twists and turns of mental time travel came from people with certain brain injuries that caused them to forget autobiographical details without forgetting the information they had picked u
4、p along the way. A man known as K. C. , for instance, could play chess with no memory of having ever played it. K. C. could remember sentences psychologists taught him without any memory of the lessons. K. C. had lost what psychologists now call episodic memory. Endel Tulving, a Canadian psychologis
5、t, defined episodic memory as the ability to recall the details of personal experiences: what happened, where it happened, when it happened and so on. Dr. Tulving argued that episodic memory was distinct from other kinds of memory that did not involve personal experience. People can remember how to
6、get to a subway stop, for example, without recalling the first time they were there.Episodic memory was also unique to our species, Dr. Tulving maintained. For one thing, he argued that episodic memory required self-awareness. You cant remember yourself if you dont know you exist. He also argued tha
7、t there was no evidence animals could recollect experiences, even if those experiences left an impression on them.Many animal behavior experts agreed with Dr. Tulving, even though they had not actually run experiments testing the idea. But when Nicola Clayton, a comparative psychologist, first heard
8、 about the claim, she had a different reaction. Dr. Clayton began to test western scrub jays(灌丛鸦)to see if they met any of the criteria for episodic memory. The jays can hide several thousand pieces of food each year and remember the location of each one. Dr. Clayton wondered if scrub jays simply re
9、membered locations, or if they remembered the experience of hiding the food.She ran an experiment using two kinds of food: moth larvae(幼虫) and peanuts. Scrub jays prefer larvae to peanuts while the larvae are still fresh. When the larvae are dead for a few hours, the jays prefer peanuts. Dr. Clayton
10、 gave the birds a chance to hide both kinds of food and then put them in another cage. She later returned the birds to their hiding-places, in some cases after four, hours and in other cases after five days. The time the scrub jays spent away from their caches had a big effect on the type of food th
11、ey looked for. The birds that waited four hours tended to dig up larvae, and the birds that had to wait for five days passed the larvae by and dug up peanuts instead.In 1998, Dr. Clayton and her colleagues published the results of their experiment, declaring that scrub jays met the standards for “ep
12、isodic-like“ memory. Other scientists have followed Dr. Claytons lead and have searched for signs of episodic-like memory in ether animals. When rats are exploring a maze, for example, they seem to be able to recall which kinds of food they encountered along the way. Hummingbirds(蜂鸟)seem to remember
13、 where and when they visited individual flowers for nectar. Rhesus monkeys (恒河猴)can remember where they put food, but not how long ago they put it there.Some researchers have not been persuaded by these studies, however. “Animals seem to be living very much in the present, “said Thomas Suddendorf, a
14、 comparative psychologist at the University of Queensland in Australia. Dr. Suddendorf argues that a scrub jay could remember type of food along with the location of a cache without having a sense or memory of self. “Information is not really what characterizes mental time travel. “Dr. Suddendorf sa
15、id. “I know that in 1967 in Sweden my mom gave birth to me but that doesnt mean I can travel back to that time and experience that event.“Episodic memory also depends on many other faculties in the human mind, Dr. Suddendorf argues. He said he believes it evolved after our ancestors branched off fro
16、m other apes. The advantage lay not in knowing the past, however, but in providing “an advantage for predicting the future, “he said. Recent brain scanning studies support Dr. Suddendorfs link between the past and future. Daniel Schacter, a psychologist, and his colleagues at Harvard University rece
17、ntly studied how brains function as people think about past experiences and imagine future ones. Constructing an episodic memory causes a distinctive network of brain regions to become active. As a person then adds details to the memory, the network changes, as some regions quiet down and others fir
18、e up. The researchers then had their subjects think about themselves in the future. Many parts of the episodic memory network became active again.Dr. Suddendorf argues that these overlapping networks for mental time travel evolved at least 1.6 million years ago. He points to stone tools primitives m
19、ade at that time. Paleoanthropologists(古人类学家)have determined that the tools were moved many miles from where they were made. “If youve just eaten, the only reason youre going to take a tool with you is if you anticipate using it in the future,“ he said.Dr. Suddendorf has roused comparative psycholog
20、ists to action. They have been looking for evidence that animals can also plan for the future. “We tested squirrel monkeys to see if they could anticipate the future, and to our surprise it looks like they could, “said Dr. William Roberts, a comparative psychologist at the University of Western Onta
21、rio. He and his colleagues ran a test in which they offered squirrel monkeys a choice between one piece of date(海枣) or four. Not surprisingly, the monkeys took four. But the scientists then began to take away water from the monkeys before they offered the choice. If the monkeys took four pieces, the
22、 scientists kept the water away for three hours. If the monkeys took one, the scientists returned the water in half an hour. The monkeys learned to choose one date. Even though they were not thirsty at the time, they anticipated becoming thirsty in the future.Dr. Clayton recently tested her scrub ja
23、ys for foresight. She and her colleagues put the birds in three adjoining compartments for six days. Each morning the birds were shut for two hours in one of two rooms. In one room they got nothing to eat. In the other room, they got powdered pine nuts. For the rest of the day, each bird could move
24、around all three rooms and enjoy more powdered nuts. On the seventh day, the scientists switched the powdered pine nuts with real ones. “If Im a bird. what I could do is to take some of the provisions and hide it so that if I do wake up there in the morning, I can get my own breakfast , “Dr. Clayton
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- 大学 英语六级 80 答案 解析 DOC
