满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

While most of us are happy to take the c...

While most of us are happy to take the credit when things go well, few of us are willing to take the blame when things go wrong. Rather than trying to hide our shame or embarrassment, experts found that we are simply less aware when our actions result in a negative outcome.

The research may explain why we often feel it hard to take the blame for our actions.“Our result suggests that people may really experience less responsibility for negative than for positive outcomes,” said Patrick Haggard, leading researcher and professor of the institute of Cognitive Neuroscience at University College London.

In a series of tests, participants were asked to press a key. A sound then followed, either disapproving, neutral or approving, and they were then asked to estimate the time between the action and when they had heard the sound.

Researchers found that individuals experienced different levels of responsibility depending on the outcomes. They also discovered they were significantly slower to recognize if their actions had resulted in a bad consequence, compared to when they had done well.

“Effectively, we have found that we experience a negative outcome differently, not just retell it differently. We make a weaker connection when there is a bad result. And respond much more strongly when something good happens,”said Professor Haggard. When something goes right, everyone wants to take the credit, and when things go wrong, nobody is interested in putting their hands up.

The researchers said our brain is“very much concerned”with reward, as good results are key to survival. Although our own perception(认知) of whether we are guilty of something or not is changed by the outcomes, this does not provide a defense if we have done something wrong.“Our experience of our own responsibilities can be misleading and can be strongly colored by the outcomes of our actions.”said Professor Haggard.“We have to take responsibility for what actually do, not just for how we experience things.”

1.People who don’t take the blame for their actions        .

A.always try to hide their shame or embarrassment.

B.are only willing to take the credit when things go well

C.feel less responsible for negative than for positive outcomes

D.are less aware of what to do when a negative outcome happens

2.Which of the following statements is TRUE?

A.Our level of responsibility can be strongly affected by the outcomes of our actions.

B.When something bad happens, nobody is interested in dealing with the problem.

C.People were quicker to recognize if their actions had resulted in a bad consequence.

D.Participants were asked to count the time between pressing a key and hearing the sound.

3.How is the passage developed?

A.By giving examples.

B.By quoting research findings.

C.By analyzing cause and effect.

D.By providing data.

4.According to the passage, a person who is concerned with reward is        .

A.awkward             B.natural           C.absurd            D.stubborn

 

1.C 2.A 3.B 4.B 【解析】 试题分析:本文属于科普说明文,介绍了人们为什么不愿意承认错误也不愿意承担责任的原因。是因为我们的大脑更在意我们的行动所获得的好的结果,以及最终获得的奖励,却很少关注不好的结果。 1.C 细节理解题。根据第二段第二句Our result suggests that people may really experience less responsibility for negative than for positive outcomes可知研究结果说明相对于积极的结果,对不好的后果人们很少承担相应的责任。故C项正确。 2.A 推理判断题。根据第四段第一句Researchers found that individuals experienced different levels of responsibility depending on the outcomes.研究人们发现根据个人行动不同的结果,人们会体验不同程度的责任心。也就是说人们的责任心是受到我们行动的结果的影响的。故A正确。 3.B 写作手法题。作者在文章中介绍了这一研究的成果,如第二段中“Our result suggests that people may really experience less responsibility for negative than for positive outcomes,”第四段第一句Researchers found that individuals experienced different levels of responsibility depending on the outcomes.以及第五段“Effectively, we have found that we experience a negative outcome differently, not just retell it differently.这些都属于引用了研究成果来组织全文。故B正确。 4. 考点:考查科普说明文阅读
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

Walk through the Amazon rainforest today and you will find it steamy, warm, damp and thick. But if you had been there around 15,000 years ago, during the last ice age, would it have been the same? For more than 30 years, scientists have been arguing about how rainforests might have reacted to the cold, dry climate of the ice ages, but till now, no one has reached a satisfying answer.

Rainforests like the Amazon are important for mopping up CO2 from the atmosphere and helping to solve global warming. Currently the trees in the Amazon take in around 500 million tons of CO2 each year: equal to the total amount of CO2 given off in the UK each year. But how will the Amazon react to the future climate change? If it gets drier, will it survive and continue to draw down CO2? Scientists hope that they will be able to learn in advance how the rainforest will manage in the future by understanding how rainforests reacted to climate change in the past.

Unfortunately, collecting information is incredibly difficult. To study the past climate, scientists need to look at fossilized pollen(花粉)kept in lake mud, Going back to the last ice age means drilling down into lake sediments(沉淀物), which requires specialized equipment and heavy machinery. There are very few roads and paths, or places to land helicopters and aeroplanes.  Rivers tend to be the easiest way to enter the forest, but this still leaves vast areas between the rivers completely unsampled(未取样). So far, only a handful of cores have been drilled that go back to the last ice age and none of them provide enough information to prove how the Amazon forest reacts to climate change.

1.How do scientists study the past climate change?

A. By predicting the climate change in the future.

B. By drilling down deep into land sediments.

C. By analyzing fossilized pollen in lake mud.

D. By taking samples from rivers in the Amazon.

2.Why is it difficult to collect information about the past climate change?

A. Because scientists can't find proper equipment and machinery.

B. Because it is very difficult to obtain complete samples.

C. Because helicopters and aeroplanes have no place to land.

D. Because none of the cores provide any information.

3.Where is the passage most probably taken from?

A. A medical journal.                             B. A news report

C. A travel brochure.                             D. A science magazine.

4.The best title for the text may be         .

A. Secrets of the Rainforest

B. Climates of the Amazon

C. The History of the Rainforest

D. Changes of the Rainforest

 

查看答案

My father was always a good gardener. One of my earliest memories is standing without shoes in the freshly tilled(翻耕的)soil, my hands blackened from digging in the ground.

As a child, I loved following Dad around in the garden, I remember Dad pushing the tiller(耕作机)ahead in perfectly straight lines. Dad loved growing all sorts of things: yellow and green onions, watermelons almost as big as me, rows of yellow com, and our favorite --- red tomatoes.

As I grew into a teenager, I didn't get so excited about gardening with Dad. Instead of magical land of possibility, it had turned into some kind of prison. As Dad grew older, his love for gardening never disappeared. After all the kids were grown and had started families of their own, Dad turned to gardening like never before. Even when he was diagnosed with cancer, he still took care of his garden.But then, the cancer, bit by bit, invaded his body. I had to do the things he used to do. What really convinced me that Dad was dying was the state of his garden that year. The rows and rows of multicolored vegetables were gone. Too tired to weed them, he simply let them be. He only planted tomatoes.

For the first few years after he died, I couldn't even bear to look at anyone's garden without having strong memories pour over me like cold water from a bucket. Three years ago, I decided to plant my own garden and started out with just a few tomatoes. That morning, after breaking up a fair amount of soil, something caught the comer of my eye and I had to smile, It was my eight-year-old son Nathan, happily playing in the freshly tilled soil.

1.Why did the author like the garden when he was a child?

A. The garden was planted with colorful flowers.

B. The garden was just freshly tilled by his father.

C. He loved what his father grew in the garden.

D. He enjoyed being in the garden with his father.

2.When all the kids started their own families, the author's father        .

A. stopped his gardening

B. turned to other hobbies

C. devoted more to gardening

D. focused on planting tomatoes

3.What happened to the garden when the author's father was seriously ill?

A. The author's son took charge of it.

B. No plant grew in the garden at all.

C. The garden was almost deserted.

D. It brought the author a great harvest.

4.We can infer from the last paragraph that         .

A. the author's son played happily in the garden

B. the author's son reminded him of his own father

C. the author's son was very glad to help the author

D. the author's son will continue gardening as well

 

查看答案

书面表达

假如你是李华,你在很多公共场所经常看见许多成年人和小孩在不停地摆弄手机,请针对这一现象,给全班同学写一篇演讲稿。内容包括:

1.描述现象;

2.分析原因(至少两条);

3.说明影响;

4.提出建议。

注意:1.词数100左右;

2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;

3.开头和结尾已经给出,不计入总词数。

Dear fellow students,

The topic of my speech today is about mobile phones.

 

 

 

 

 

 

That’s all.Thank you for your listening.

 

查看答案

Nowadays, mobile payment is becoming more and more popular with our shopping. In addition to pay in cash, by cheque or credit card, a consumer can use a mobile phone to pay for a wide range of services and goods. Compared with those traditional mean, mobile payment is faster and more convenient. Besides, it can be used at any given time or place, thus save much time and energy. Furthermore, we can’t overlook the fact it must be operated with a phone and a network. And it is only recently which the technology to support such systems has become wide available. It will be arouse public concern over its potential risk, such as the account security and other unexpected problems. Technology is changing its life rapidly, so we should get ready for it.

 

查看答案

阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容或括号内单词的正确形式。

An old proverb says, “Friends are like wine; the older, the better.”So, nowadays many people consider old friends to be  1.  (important) than new friends. For example, if two pieces of advice are given to solve a problem, one from a new friend and the other from  2.  old friend, people always tend to adapt the latter one,  3.  the new friend’s advice may be better.

4.  (disagree) with the old proverb, I believe that new friends are not 5.  (necessary) worse than old friends. Why? Because the __6.__ ( long)of time cannot determine whether your friendship is better or not.

Once you call someone friend, he must be a reliable person,__ 7.__ interests are in common with  8.  (you). As time goes by, a friend’s outside look may change, but the inside characters of him and his interests  9.  (change). It is just these unchangeable characters and interests that make him a friend to you.  10.  , on this point, there is no difference between old friends and new friends.

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.