英语科技文选自考2015年10月真题及答案解析

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26

What can be inferred from the passage when people have to receive painful treatments?

  • A.They are more likely to take them.
  • B.They will try to postpone them.
  • C.They will consider whether the treatments are worth confronting.
  • D.They will abandon such treatments.
27

The phrase “in time” in line 4, para. 7, is closest in meaning to______.

  • A.very soon
  • B.early enough
  • C.in the end
  • D.fairly long period of time
28

Which of the following is NOT true about the study made by Story and his colleagues?

  • A.It helped to develop diagnostic tools.
  • B.It showed that the dread of pain increased rapidly as pain approached in time.
  • C.It changed round the usual pattern of temporal discounting.
  • D.It involved giving mild electric shocks to a number of subjects.
30

(B)

   “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself,”said Franklin D. Roosevelt. He might have been onto something: research suggests that people are happy to endure a bit more pain, if it means they spend less time waiting for it.

   Classical thanes of decision-making suppose that people bring rewards forward and postpone punishments, because we give far-off events less weight. This is called “temporal discounting”. But this theory seems to go out the window when it comes to pain.

  One explanation for this is that the anticipation of pain is itself unpleasant, a phenomenon that researchers have appropriately termed “dread”.

  To investigate how dread varies with time, Giles Story at University College London, and his colleagues, hooked up 33 volunteers to a device that gave them mild electric shocks. The researchers also presented people with a series of choices between more or less mildly painful shocks, sooner or later.

   During every “episode” there was a minimum of two shocks, which could rise to a maximum of 14, but before they were given them, people had to make a choice such as nine extra shocks now or six extra shocks five episodes from now. The number of shocks they received each time was determined by these past choices.

   No pain, no gain.

  • Although a few people always chose to experience the minimum pain, 70 per cent of the time, on average, participants chose to receive the extra shocks sooner rather than a smaller number later. By varying the number of shocks and when they occurred, the t
  • A.No pain, no gain
  • B.The only thing we have to fear is fear itself
  • C.Wailing for pain can cause more dread than pain itself
  • D.Dread varies with time
31

What can be said about temporal discounting?

  • A.It is often used in lottery.
  • B.It is a marketing strategy.
  • C.It becomes useless when people judge pain.
  • D.It is a kind of decision-making.
32

According to the passage, which of the following statements about PNI is NOT true?

  • A.It is interdisciplinary.
  • B.It aims at genome-wide transcription.
  • C.It may be lacking in care and exactness.
  • D.It deals with how subjective moods connect with the physiology of the nervousand immune systems.
33

What can be inferred from the passage about Dole’s studies?

  • A.They are focused on negative mental states.
  • B.They are focused on positive menial states.
  • C.They are acknowledged as interdisciplinary.
  • D.They are meant to find a healthier way to live.
34

Why did Cole have an unusual hobby when he was on a post doctoral program?

  • A.To match art buyer with their favorite artists
  • B.To make looking at art even more rewarding
  • C.To benefit his immune system
  • D.To find homes for unloved pieces of art
35

(A)

  When Steve Cole was a postdoc, he had an unusual hobby: matching art buyers with artists that they might like. The task made looking at art, something he had always loved, even more enjoyable. “There was an extra layer of purpose. I loved the ability to help artists I thought were great to find an appreciative audience,” he says.

  • At the time, it was nothing more than a quirky sideline. But his latest findings have caused Cole — now a professor at the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology at the University of California, Los Angeles — to wonder whether the exhilaration and sense
  • At one time, most self-respecting molecular biologists would have scoffed at the idea. Today, evidence from many studies suggests that mental stales such as stress can influence health. Still, it has proved difficult to explain how this happens at the mol
  • A.Defining PNI
  • B.Cole’s studies in PNI
  • C.Cole’s unusual hobby
  • D.How to find a healthier way to live