[考研类试卷]考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷19及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语二(阅读)模拟试卷 19 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 While U.S. companies are worrying about how to recruit talent from abroad in the face of increasingly rigorous immigration rules, a different and far mo
2、re significant challenge is quietly building. When young knowledge workers look for a job today, they seriously consider companies half a world away. Homegrown American talent is moving abroad, in what could become a huge shift in the world economic order.Early warning signs abound. Look at Singapor
3、es success in recruiting top U.S. academics to its universities and research centers: It lured the worlds leading seismologist (a geologist who studies earthquakes and the mechanical characteristics of the Earth) away from the California Institute of Technology and the number two scientist at the Na
4、tional Institutes of Health away from that organization. Silicon Valley expatriates have been moving to China in a small but steady stream. Farmers from the Midwest are using their high-tech methods to make a new start in Brazil, where real estate is cheap.The United States current economic woes are
5、 accelerating this trend. The trickle that has started at the top will become a flood as mid-career executives look for new opportunities abroad. Of course, even the best manager will struggle if he or she doesnt speak the local language. But one can get by in India with English only, and Spanish is
6、 relatively easy to learn. Moreover, when the children of todays expatriates enter the workforce, theyll reap a huge advantage from knowing the second languageChinese, Portuguese, Hindithey learned to speak at home as youngsters. More and more parents are discovering that a multilingual education ca
7、n help in guaranteeing lifelong employ ability for their offspring.Government policy will be crucial in determining how well U.S. companies respond to the increasing outflow of American talent. Lawmakers must not resort to knowledge protectionismfor instance, by requiring people who attend state-fun
8、ded universities to spend a certain amount of their working life in the United States. Rather, they must ensure that America remains the most favorable place for high-tech enterprises and continues to attract foreign students to its universities and foreign workers to its companies.The U.S. monopoly
9、 on leading-edge opportunities is at an end. The worlds best and brightest no longer assume that their future lies exclusively in the United States, and Americas best are coming to a-gree: Their path to a dream career may well lead them overseas.1 It can be learned from the first two paragraphs that
10、 .(A)the immigration rules in America have loosened up(B) American talent is shifting the world economic order(C) Singapore has replaced US to be the ideal country for scientists(D)there have been many signs of American talent moving abroad2 The author holds that an increasing number of Americans mo
11、ve abroad mainly because of_.(A)better opportunities abroad(B) huge linguistic advantages(C) domestic economic recession(D)lifelong employment security3 According to Paragraph 4, knowledge protectionism is characterized by being _.(A)critical(B) compulsory(C) competitive(D)compelling4 To deal with t
12、he outflow of American talent, the United States government should _.(A)tighten up its immigration rules(B) adopt knowledge protectionism(C) keep America an ideal place for high-tech companies(D)monopolize leading-edge opportunities5 Which of the following could be the most appropriate title for the
13、 text?(A)Economy and American Immigration(B) A Looming American Talents Outflow(C) An Alerting Reverse in Immigration(D)American Immigration Past and Present5 Nearly all cultures have a version of the arrow of time, a process by which they move towards the future and away from the past. According to
14、 a paper to be published in Psychological Science this has an interesting psychological effect. A group of researchers, led by Eugene Caruso of the University of Chicago, found that people judge the distance of events differently, depending on whether they are in the past or future.The paper calls t
15、his the “Temporal Doppler Effect“. In physics, the Doppler effect describes the way that waves change frequency depending on whether their source is traveling towards or away from you. Mr Caruso argues that something similar happens with peoples perception of time. Because future events are associat
16、ed with diminishing distance, while those in the past are thought of as receding, something happening in one month feels psychologically closer than something that happened a month ago.This idea was tested in a series of experiments. In one, researchers asked 323 volunteers and divided them into two
17、 groups. A week before Valentines day, members of the first were asked how they planned to celebrate it. A week after February 14th the second group reported how they had celebrated it. Both groups also had to describe how near the day felt on a scale of one to seven. Those describing forthcoming pl
18、ans were more likely to report it as feeling “a short time from now“, while those who had already experienced it tended to cluster at the “a long time from now“ end of the scale. To account for the risk that recalling actual events requires different cognitive functions than imagining ones that have
19、 not yet happened, they also asked participants to rate the distance of hypothetical events a month in the past or future. The asymmetry remained.Interestingly, the effect can be reversed by manipulating times arrow. In another experiment, participants were plugged into a virtual reality machine, wi
20、th some moving forwards along a tree-lined street others backwards. Those who were moving backwards reported that past events began to feel closer.Mr Caruso speculates that his research has implications for psychological well-being. He suspects that people who do not show this biasthose who feel the
21、 past as being closermight be more subject to depression, because they are more likely to dwell on past events. There may also be lessons for politicians and business leaders. Talking of future plans may be more effective than boasting about past successes. “People want to know what are you going to
22、 do for me next, not what have you done for me lately,“ suggests Mr Caruso.6 According to Paragraph 1, the arrow of time may have an impact on _.(A)the process of almost all cultures when moving forward(B) peoples judge of the distance of certain events(C) mens comprehension of events in the future(
23、D)peoples memory of things happened in the past7 Doppler effect illustrates that waves change frequency based on _.(A)the different direction of waves source from observer(B) the diminishing distance when waves moving closer(C) the perception of people when facing the waves(D)the diminishing gap bet
24、ween waves source and people8 According to Paragraph 3, which of the following is true of the experiments?(A)Members of the second group have generally forgotten the details about Valentines day.(B) Members of the first group show better sense of time than those of the second group.(C) Members of th
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