更多"Our brains have been processing sop"的相关试题:
[填空题]Our brains have been processing sophisticated information via our senses for millions of years. So why is it we are still {{U}} (36) {{/U}} to lies Why aren’t we better at discovering the deception of others
The language of the face is {{U}} (37) {{/U}}. Almost our first sight as new-born baby is our mother’s face smiling at us. Not only are we immediately {{U}} (38) {{/U}} to respond to faces, but right away we can also {{U}} (39) {{/U}} surprise, pleasure and distress. The constant visual dialogue, as parent and child {{U}} (40) {{/U}} expressions back and forth, is {{U}} (41) {{/U}} for the young brain. It is how we build a {{U}} (42) {{/U}} of other minds--we feel happy when we smile, so someone else smiling must be {{U}} (43) {{/U}} the same.
{{U}} (44) {{/U}}, says Paul Ekman, a leading researcher in the subject. "Wherever you are, anger, happiness, fear, disgust sadness and surprise look the same."
But we make all sorts of false assumptions about faces.
[单项选择]A. They found that male brains have more connections on one side of the brain while female both.
B. They found that men are more straightforward than women.
C. They found that men are more persistent than women.
D. They found that women are more efficient than men are in problem solving.
[单项选择] Many now have been breathing hot flames at our industry and so I thought it would be time to say my piece this week, after all, we in the business cannot deny that it has been a rough spring for news paper editors and reporters.’’ Ethical scandals great and small have soiled newsrooms from coast to coast. Everyone knows about the profound deceits of Jayson Blair at The New York Times, and the "Writergate" controversy involving Rick Bragg, which led to the departure of the two top editors at the paper. Other misdeeds have ranged from two reporters at The Salt Lake Tribune selling information to The National Enquirer, to a food writer for The Hartford Courant fired for plagiarizing recipes. Are newspaper standards going to pot
Some say ethics are worse than ever or are they The past is filled with people running photos of wrestlers in the sports section in exchange for money. In fact, ethical breaches may be less of a problem than 20 years ago. A 1,t of newspapers are cutting co
A. newsrooms are suffering from a decline in standards
B. there are too many ethical scandals going on in newspapers
C. there is a perception that newspapers should do more to correct mistakes
D. this has been a rough time for newspapers and many are wondering what is wrong
[单项选择]
All we have a clock located inside our brains. Similar to your bedside alarm clock, your internal clock runs on a 24-hour cycle. This cycle, called a circadian rhythm, helps control when you wake, when you eat and when you sleep.
Somewhere around puberty, something happens in the timing of the biological clock. The clock pushes forward, so adolescents and teenagers are unable to fall asleep as early as they used to. When your mother tells you it’s time for bed, your body may be pushing you to stay up for several hours more. And the light coming from your computer screen or TV could be pushing you to stay up even later.
This shift is natural for teenagers. But staying up very late and sleeping late can get your body’s clock out of sync with the cycle of light and dark. It can also make it hard to get out of bed in the morning and may bring other problems, too. Teenagers are put in a kind of a gray cloud when they don’t get enough sleep, says Mary
A. it is natural for teenagers to stay up late and get up late
B. staying up late has a bad effect on teenagers’ ability to think and learn
C. during puberty most teenagers experience a kind of gray cloud
D. it is hard for teenagers to get out of bed in the morning