[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷440及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 440 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 Dieting, according to an old joke, may not actually make you live longer, but it sure feels that way. Nevertheless, evidence has been accumulating since
2、 the 1930s that calorie restrictionreducing an animals energy intake below its energy expenditureextends lifespan and delays the onset of age-related diseases in rats, dogs, fish and monkeys. Such results have inspired thousands of people to put up with constant hunger in the hope of living longer,
3、healthier lives. They have also led to a search for drugs that mimic the effects of calorie restriction without the pain of going on an actual diet.Amid the hype(intensive publicity), it is easy to forget that no one has until now shown that calorie restriction works in humans. That omission, howeve
4、r, changed this month, with the publication of the initial results of the first systematic investigation into the matter. This study, known as CALERIE(Comprehensive Assessment of Long-term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy), was sponsored by Americas National Institutes of Health. It took 48 men
5、and women aged between 25 and 50 and assigned them randomly to either a control group or a calorie-restriction regime. Those in the second group were required to cut their calorie intake for six months to 75% of that needed to maintain their weight.The CALERIE study is a landmark in the history of t
6、he field, because its subjects were either of normal weight or only slightly overweight Previous projects have used individuals who were clinically obese, thus confusing the unquestionable benefits to health of reducing obesity with the possible advantages of calorie restriction to the otherwise hea
7、lthy.At a molecular level, CALERIE suggests these advantages are real. For example, those on restricted diets had lower insulin resistance and lower levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. They showed drops in body temperature and blood-insulin levelsboth phenomena that have been seen in long
8、-lived, calorie-restricted animals. They also suffered less oxidative damage to their DNAEric Ravussin, of Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, who is one of the studys authors, says that such results provide support for the theory that calorie restriction produces a metabolic adaptation over
9、and above that which would be expected from weight loss alone. Nevertheless, such metabolic adaptation could be the reason why calorie restriction is associated with longer lifespans in other animalsand that is certainly the hope of those who, for the past 15 years, have been searching for ways of t
10、riggering that metabolic adaptation by means other than semi-starvation.1 The evidence since the 1930s has inspired people to(A)live longer and healthier.(B) invent a calorie-restricting drug.(C) believe in calorie restriction.(D)get rid of constant hunger.2 Which of the following is true about the
11、CALERIE study?(A)It proves that calorie restriction works in humans.(B) It has 24 male subjects and the same number of female ones.(C) It is the first investigation into the effects of calorie restriction.(D)It lasted for six months and had the final results published.3 What makes the CALERIE study
12、a significant one in the field?(A)It used the subjects of both genders and different ages.(B) It selected people of normal weight as the subjects.(C) It rectified the misconception of dieting.(D)It was systematic in research method and based on evidence.4 By saying “CALERIE suggests these advantages
13、 are real(Line 1, Paragraph 4)“, the author is dealing with the results of the study from a(A)general view.(B) subjective view.(C) macro view.(D)micro view.5 It can be inferred from the last paragraph that(A)the metabolic adaptation solely resulted from weight loss.(B) the metabolic adaptation can b
14、e achieved by dieting.(C) semi-starvation was seen as an effective means for weight loss.(D)people had no idea about the metabolic adaptation before CALERIE.5 Researchers in the field of artificial intelligence have long been intrigued by games, and not just as a way of avoiding work. Games provide
15、an ideal setting to explore important elements of the design of cleverer machines, such as pattern recognition, learning and planning. They also hold out the tantalizing possibility of fame and fortune should the program ever beat a human champion.Ever since the stunning victory of Deep Blue, a prog
16、ram running on an IBM supercomputer, over Gary Kasparov, then world chess champion, in 1997, it has been clear that computers would dominate that particular game. Today, though, they are pressing the attack on every front. There is one game, however, where humans still reign supreme Go. Yet here too
17、 their grip is beginning to loosen.Go was invented more than 2,500 years ago in China. It is a strategic contest in which two players take turns to place stones on the intersections of a grid with 19 lines on each side. Each player tries to stake out territory and surround his opponent. The rules ar
18、e simple but the play is extraordinarily complex. During a game, some stones will “die“, and some will appear to be dead but spring back to life at an ill-timed moment. It is often difficult to say who is winning right until the end.Deep Blue beat Mr. Kasparov using the “brute force“ technique. Rath
19、er than search for the best move in a given position, the computer considers all whites moves, and all blacks possible replies, and all whites replies to those replies, and so on for, say, a dozen turns. The resulting map of possible moves has millions of branches. The computer combs through the pos
20、sible outcomes and plays the one move that would give its opponent the fewest chances of winning. Unfortunately, brute force will not work in Go. First, the game has many more possible positions than chess does. Second, the number of possible moves from a typical position in Go is about 200, compare
21、d with about a dozen in chess. Finally, evaluating a Go position is fiendishly difficult. The fastest programs can assess just 50 positions a second, compared with 500,000 in chess.In the past two decades researchers have explored several alternative strategies with indifferent results. Now, however
22、, programmers are making impressive gains with a technique known as the Monte Carlo method. Given a position, a program using a Monte Carlo algorithm contemplates every move and plays a large number of random games to see what happens. If it wins in 80% of those games, the move is probably good. Oth
23、erwise, it keeps looking. The result is a new generation of fast programs that play particularly well on small versions of the Go board.6 According to Paragraph 1, computer games could(A)promote the researches of human intelligence.(B) help researchers avoid work.(C) serve to improve the program des
24、igning.(D)bring fame and fortune to the human champion.7 The victory of Deep Blue shows that(A)the chess game is too simple for computers to play.(B) the supercomputer is very good at calculation.(C) computers will dominate every front of games.(D)humans should prepare for the attack of computers.8
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