专业八级-409及答案解析.doc
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1、专业八级-409 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、READING COMPREHENSIO(总题数:0,分数:0.00)二、Passage 1(总题数:1,分数:20.00)How do we recognize fear in another person? Scientists have long known that the amygdala, an almond-shaped part of the brain, is critical for the perception of fear. But exactly what role it plays in
2、recognizing facial expressions has remained a mystery. A new study shows that the amygdala actively seeks out potentially important information in the face of another person. In particular, it focuses our attention on a person“s eyes, the facial features most likely to register fear. “These findings
3、 provide a much more abstract and general account of what the amygdala does,“ Ralph Adolphs said. Adolphs is a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Caltech University in Pasadena, California, and the University of Iowa in Iowa City. Adolphs“s study focuses on a 38-year-old woman with an amygd
4、ala that is damaged from a rare genetic disease. As a result, she is unable to recognize fear in people“s facial expressions. However, the scientists have found that she is able to recognize fear if instructed to concentrate her attention on a person“s eyes. Adolphs says the research could help thos
5、e who suffer from other disorders such as autism, which can dull some people“s ability to discern important facial signals. The study is published in this week“s issue of the science journal Nature. Adolphs and his colleagues have studied the woman, known as SM, for more than a decade. She has a bra
6、in lesion in the amygdala. Not only can she not recognize fear, but she also fails to judge how trustworthy people look. To find out how a person perceives fear in other people, the scientists had study participants look at photographs of fearful and happy faces through holes that revealed only smal
7、l parts of the images. People with normal brains always looked immediately at the eye region of a faceeven more so when the face was fearful. SM, on the other hand, failed to spontaneously look at the eyes, instead staring straight ahead at the photographs. As a result, she judged that each face had
8、 a neutral expression. “She simply doesn“t know where to look in faces in order to seek out potentially useful information,“ Adolphs said. “That knowledge is something that other people do automatically.“ Although SM“s damaged amygdala is unable to direct the visual system to seek information, its c
9、apacity to process visual information is intact. Remarkably, the scientists found that SM was able to recognize fear in a person if told explicitly to look at the eyes of the other person. This solution, though, was short-lived, as SM needed to be reminded continuously to look at the eyes. “This rev
10、eals that the deficit caused by amygdala lesion is not causing a loss of the knowledge of what fear is or looks like, which is what people would have thought until now,“ Patrik Vuilleumier said. Vuilleumier, a neuroscientist at the University Medical Center of Geneva, Switzerland, wrote a commentary
11、 in Nature on the study. The results reinforce the idea that the amygdala can modulate perception and attention and is not responsible only for “knowing“ or “analyzing“ signals of fear, Vuilleumier said. In other words, in addition to analyzing other people“s eye signals, the amygdala “tells“ you to
12、 check others“ eyes in the first place. “The amygdala is able to guide the visual system to respond to faces, not only the converse that the visual system is feeding the amygdaia,“ he said. The scientists have also discovered that the amygdala is activated by other stimuli that don“t have anything t
13、o do with fear, such as erotic images. “The simple answer that the amygdala processes fear or the threat of danger is only a very small part of the story,“ Adolphs said. “What we“re looking for is a more comprehensive account of what the amygdala does that may begin to tie all these pieces together.
14、“ Adolphs says many parts of the brain work together and that more research will probably relate cognitive abilities to a network of brain structures. Meanwhile, the study could lead to therapies to help patients with defective emotional perception to lead more normal lives. People with autism, for
15、example, may have similar brain impairments to those of the woman in the study. Some autistics may be unable to make normal eye movements when looking at other people. They may therefore fail to make judgments about other people“s emotions. “To the extent that we could actually instruct people with
16、autism how to look at the world and other people“s faces, we might be in a position to improve their impaired social functions,“ Adolphs said.(分数:20.00)(1).“A brain lesion“ in Paragraph Four probably means(分数:4.00)A.a psychological damage of the brain.B.a physical damage of the brain.C.a cognitive d
17、isorder of the brain.D.a respondent loss of the brain.(2).According to the passage, people with their amygdala damaged can(分数:4.00)A.recognize fear with instruction.B.recognize fear spontaneously.C.distinguish facial expressions.D.seek important facial signals.(3).Which of the following is NOT inclu
18、ded in the findings of the new study?(分数:4.00)A.The amygdala can guide the visual system to look for information.B.The amygdala can affect one“s perceptive and attentive ability.C.The damaged amygdala can deprive one“s knowledge of fear.D.The damaged amygdala can still process visual information.(4)
19、.People with damaged amygdala resemble autistics in the following points EXCEPT that(分数:4.00)A.they both suffer from brain damage.B.they both have difficulty in socialization.C.they both have defective perceptive abilities.D.they both have the desire for communication.(5).The main point of the last
20、two paragraphs is(分数:4.00)A.the cognitive function of brain structure.B.the therapeutic value of study of amygdala.C.the future focus of research on amygdala.D.the significance of research on amygdala.三、Passage 2(总题数:1,分数:20.00)Of all the misfortunes a child can suffer, few provoke as much dread as
21、autism. The conditiona neurological disorder that impedes language and derails social and emotional developmenthas become ever more common in recent decades, thanks partly to better diagnosis. Experts now suspect that one person in 160 lives with some degree of autism; that“s three to four times the
22、 rate in the 1970s. But while the outward manifestations are well known, science is just beginning to illuminate the underlying biology. What goes wrong in the autistic brain? What defect or injury leaves it largely incapable of empathy? A growing body of evidence, capped by new findings from the Un
23、iversity of California, San Diego, raises a tantalizing possibility. The new study, published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, links the condition to abnormally rapid brain growth during infancyand it raises new hopes for diagnosis and treatment. The key to last weeks finding was
24、not a million-dollar imaging device but a tape measure. Past studies have shown that autistic toddlers have abnormally large brains for their age. But because autism is rarely detected in kids younger than 2 or 3 years old, researchers have never known quite how that situation arises. Two years ago
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- 专业 409 答案 解析 DOC
