[填空题]
阅读下面这篇短文,短文后有2项测试任务:(1)第23~26题要求从所给的6个选项巾为第2~5段每段选择1个正确的小标题;(2)第27~30题要求从所给的6个选项中选择4个正确选项,分别完成每个句子。
{{B}}
Even Intelligent
People Can Fail{{/B}}
1 The striking thing about the innovators who
succeeded in making our modern world is how often they failed. Turn on a light,
take a photograph, watch TV, search the Web, jet across the Pacific Ocean; talk
on a cellphone (手机). The innovators who left us these things had to find the way
to success through a maze (错综复杂) of wrong turns.
2 We have just
celebrated the 125th anniversary of American innovator Thomas Edison’s success
in heating a thin line to white-hot heat for 14 hours in his lab in New Jersey,
US. He did that on October 22, 1879, and followed up a month later by keeping a
thread of common cardboard alight (点亮着的) in an airless space for 45 hours. Three
years later he went on to light up half a square mile of downtown Manhattan,
even though only o
[填空题]
阅读下面这篇短文,短文后有2项测试任务:(1)1~4题要求从所给的6个选项中为第
2~5段每段选择1个正确的小标题;(2)第5~8题要求从所给的6个选项中选择4个正确的选项,分别完成每个句子。请将答案写在相应的位置上。
{{B}}
How We Form First
Impression{{/B}}
We all have first impression of someone we just
met. But why Why do we form an opinion about someone without really knowing
anything about him or her-aside perhaps from a few remarks or readily observable
traits.
The answer is related to how your brain allows you to be
aware of the world. Your brain is so sensitive in picking up facial traits, even
very minor difference in a how a person’s eyes, ears, nose, or mouth are placed
in relation to each other make you see him or her as different. In fact, your
brain continuously processes incoming sensory information- the sights and sounds
of your world. Theses incoming "signals" are compared against a host of
"memories" stored in the brain areas called the cortex (大脑皮层) system to
determine what these new