[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷80及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 80 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 In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 1 5, choose the most suitable one from the list A G to fit into each of the number
2、ed blank. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps.Confronted with a sink suddenly leaking water many homeowners have neither the knowledge nor the materials to make the repair themselves. In choosing a plumber they generally have to rely on some sort of signal of quality. A
3、recommendation from a stranger helps; a recommendation from a sensible neighbour can help even more; prior, direct experience is best of all.Government regulators can be said to be permanently in need of plumbers. Faced with a rapidly changing market and technological advancesof financial instrument
4、s, medical therapies, agricultural methods, software- the regulatory agencies have to make decisions quickly. 【R1】_.Jerry Kim, an assistant professor of business at Columbia University, wanted to test the relationship between reputation and regulatory treatment at the Food and Drug Administration(FD
5、A). He looked at 884 New Drug Applications(NDAs)submitted to the FDA for approval between 1990 and 2004. A firms reputation, in this case, depended not on its market share or the use of its drugs, but its generation of knowledge and innovation. 【R2】_.The hypothesis proved correct: the higher the fir
6、ms reputation, the more likely that its drugs would speed through the approval process. Other factors influenced FDA approval as well. 【R3 】_. A firms political contributions, meanwhile, were a non-factor.Mr. Kim also found a curious side effect of the drug-approval process. The FDA has a special “p
7、riority“ rating for those drugs believed to be significantly better than existing treatments.(New drugs, or those first to treat a disease, are more likely to be designated priority.)There was no statistically significant relationship, however, between a firms reputation and the likelihood of its ap
8、plication receiving priority status. 【R4】_. In separate research, Mr. Kim found that the approved drugs from high-status firms were more likely to prompt product recalls or warnings. In short, the established firms may travel more easily.Mr. Kim draws two lessons from his findings. One is practical;
9、 new biotech firms may want to partner with veterans to get their products to market more quickly and establish a strong reputation. The second is to adopt a healthy skepticism about the ability of regulators to protect the public. 【R5】_. “These people. really are dedicated to serving public interes
10、t and theyre trying their best,“ says Mr. Kim of his talks with FDA researchers. “The problem is, their best is not always good enough. “ADrugs targeted at “underserved“ illnesses(those that lack good treatments)were approved more quickly, for example, while any drug submitted after a product recall
11、, regardless of whether or not it was related to the recalled drug, was more likely to spend additional time under review.BTo find reputable plumbing contractors government should study the field more thoroughly and set a standard to make sure that all the plumbers are licensed and to ensure safe op
12、eration of water heaters and boilers.CThe biases he found were not the kind easily attributable to underhanded bribery, lobbying, or even more subtle political pressures; rather, they are the result of trying to process a great deal of information quickly.Dj Mr. Kims hypothesis was that a firm with
13、a longer track record of contributing to drug development would have its NDAs approved faster than would a developer less well known to the FDA. The more patent citations a firm had, the greater its knowledge reputation.EThe most common side effects associated with the drug include headache and stom
14、achache. The medication should not be taken by people who are trying to restrict their sodium intake.FIt might then make sense that, as one would welcome a recommended plumber, regulators might be more willing to trust companies with stronger reputations.GThis suggests that established firms are not
15、 more likely to turn out innovative or especially useful drugs than their lesser-known peers.1 【R1 】2 【R2 】3 【R3 】4 【R4 】5 【R5 】5 In the following article, some sentences have been removed. For questions 1 5, choose the most suitable one from the list AG to fit into each of the numbered blank. There
16、 are two extra choices which you do not need to use.Forty years ago Walter Mischel, an American psychologist, conducted a famous experiment. He left a series of four-year-olds alone in a room with a candy on the table. He told them that they could eat the candy at once, or wait until he came back an
17、d get two candies. 【 R1】_.Nothing surprising there. The astonishing part was the way that the four-year-olds ability to postpone satisfaction was reflected over time in their lives. Those who waited longest scored higher in academic tests at school, were much less likely to drop out of university an
18、d earned substantially higher incomes than those who gobbled up the sweet straight away. Those who could not wait at all were far more likely, in later life, to have problems with drugs or alcohol.【R2 】_. This is not a question of iron will, but about developing habits and strategies that trigger he
19、lpful processes in the unconscious, rather than unproductive ones. What matters is to learn to perceive property, people or situations in ways that reduce the temptation to lie, to steal or behave in a self-destructive way.The authors aim is to show how recent research has illuminated the complex pr
20、ocesses of the brain. “We have inherited an obsolete, shallow model of human nature,“ he argues. 【R3】 _.The shaping of this delicate balance begins early in life: the children who were best at leaving their candy on the plate tended to come from stable, organised homes. Culture and the community in
21、which a child is raised help to build the way the conscious and unconscious intertwine. 【R4】_.What does all this mean for public policy? Mr. Brooks complains that policies too frequently rely on an overly simplistic, rationalist view of human nature. That may be true, but all too many foolish polici
22、es rely on the collective reluctance of the voters to leave candies uneaten on the table. More to the point, how can a country curb crime, create true equality and reduce the social and economic costs of bad decisions? 【R5】 _.So Mr. Brooks has done well to draw such vivid attention to the wide impli
23、cations of the accumulated research on the mind and the triggers of human behaviour. But more books remain to be written about the way societies should respond to what we now know.AStudy after study, many of them little known, show that people take decisions about their jobs, relationships, actions
24、and morals in ways that involve a complex interaction between the conscious and the unconscious mind. The most important decisions begin in the realm of the unconscious, although they are often influenced by the conscious.BThe result was that they, as we can predict, almost had no way to resist the
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