People who do sleep research tell us
that a person is a sort of "information processor." We have two ways to use the
information we get each day. The first process is used when we
are awake. It takes place in the left side of the brain. It is this process that
makes us do the things we have to do. It lets us put aside those things that are
not a real part of our day’s work. The second process happens in
the fight side of the brain. This process takes all those bits of information we
did not use in the day. It turns them to dreams at night. "This process is our
regular night shift work," says physiologist Rosalind Cartwright from the
University of Illinois. "At night we put together the bits and pieces of our
day, so that we are ready to face the next day." We have several
dreams each night of our lives. About ten A. people do odd things in the first stage of sleep B. the left side of our brain is responsible for the work that is necessary to deal with during the day C. the mysteries of dreams have just been brought to light D. the function of the right side of our brain is to classify the information we fail to handle in the daytime
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[单项选择]{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
People who do sleep research tell us
that a person is a sort of "information processor." We have two ways to use the
information we get each day. The first process is used when we
are awake. It takes place in the left side of the brain. It is this process that
makes us do the things we have to do. It lets us put aside those things that are
not a real part of our day’s work. The second process happens in
the fight side of the brain. This process takes all those bits of information we
did not use in the day. It turns them to dreams at night. "This process is our
regular night shift work," says physiologist Rosalind Cartwright from the
University of Illinois. "At night we put together the bits and pieces of our
day, so that we are ready to face the next day." We have several
dreams each night of our lives. About ten A. people are likely to sleepwalk B. people become mentally active C. people often wake up D. people might do odd things
[单项选择]People who do sleep research tell us that a person is a sort of "information processor." We have two ways to use the information we get each day. The first process is used when we are awake. It takes place in the left side of the brain. It is this process that makes us do the things we have to do. It lets us put aside those things that are not a real part of our day’s work. The second process happens in the fight side of the brain. This process takes all those bits of information we did not use in the day. It turns them to dreams at night. "This process is our regular night shift work," says physiologist Rosalind Cartwright from the University of Illinois. "At night we put together the bits and pieces of our day, so that we are ready to face the next day." We have several dreams each night of our lives. About ten minutes after we fall asleep, we begin to go through four stages of sleep. Our sleep gets deeper and deeper. And it gets harder for us to wake up. At the A. people do odd things in the first stage of sleep B. the left side of our brain is responsible for the work that is necessary to deal with during the day C. the mysteries of dreams have just been brought to light D. the function of the right side of our brain is to classify the information we fail to handle in the daytime
[单项选择]Sleeping People who sleep for more than eight hours a night do not live as long as those who sleep for six hours, according to the biggest study yet into sleep patterns and mortality(死亡率). Scientists have no explanation for the findings and do not know if they mean people who like a lie. in(睡懒觉)Can extend their lives by sleeping less. 16v More than 1.1 million Americans participated in the six-year study. A. Right B. Wrong C. Not mentioned
[单项选择] {{B}}TEXT B{{/B}}
Researchers who picked up and analyzed
wild chimp droppings said on Thursday they had shown how the AIDS virus
originated in wild apes in Cameroon and then spread in humans across Africa and
eventually the world. Their study, published in the journal Science, supports
other studies that suggest people somehow caught the deadly human
immunodeficiency ,virus (HIV) from chimpanzees, perhaps by killing and eating
them. "It says that the chimpanzee group that gave rise to HIV…
this chimp community resides in Cameroon," said Beatrice Hahn of the University
of Alabama, who led the study. "But that doesn’t mean the epidemic originated
there because it didn’t," Hahn, who has been studying the genetic origin of HIV
for years, said in a telephone interview. "We actually know
where the epidemic took off. The A. blood. B. sexual contact. C. breastfeeding. D. a toilet seat.
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