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2014年1月25日雅思阅读真题回忆

2014-02-13

来源:

小编: 568
摘要:如下为1月25日雅思笔试阅读部分,根据各考生回忆,将其所回馈的信息中整理出对应机经版本的比较具体的答题。

如下为1月25日雅思笔试阅读部分,根据各考生回忆,将其所回馈的信息中整理出对应机经版本的比较具体的答题。新题部分可能不完全具体。但是,作为各位考生备考需要的机经,需要学生选择权威的环球教育阅读机经,有出版的,也有电子版本。备考学员可根据考试日期,购买最近日期出版的机经或打印一份;基础较为薄弱的考生可根据自身情况制定一份阅读机经学习计划,在平日的练习中,将自己不熟悉,不认识的单词勾画下来并将其整理在准备的单词笔记本上,特别应当对答案词汇进行重点记录,尤其是相应的同义词替换,答案所在文章对应出的长难句问题,需要逐个解决击破。每日将整理好的单词进行反复的查阅,做到故而知新。对于阅读单词的要求,建议掌握中文意思为佳,不强求读音和拼写。同时,注意每日的泛读量,提高单位时间内的阅读速度。建议以15天—20天为学习周期。关于雅思阅读技巧,雅思全套课程的备考准备可咨询“南通环球教育”教学部专业教学团队。新浪微博 @ 南通环球教育直营校 @南通环球教育教研部

                 

Passage one

文章新旧

疑似旧题: V13089V12012

题材

心理类

文章标题

测谎技术的使用

文章题型

T/F/NG  (6个)
填空

文章概要

一个新的识别犯罪的系统与之前旧的系统(测谎仪)的对比。之前的旧技术存在偏差,因为无法辨别人是因为紧张还是说谎导致心率不齐,而这项新技术会弥补这项缺陷,因为
它能通过对人血液流动速度、心率等变化来更准确的判断这个人有没有说谎,但是这个新的技术还在实验阶段,被实验者都是一些学生和志愿者。

部分答案

建议参考:
剑桥真题8 Test 1 Passage 3:Telepathy 心电感应实验
剑桥真题9 Test 2 Passage 3:A Neuroscientist reveals how to think differently 心理学家谈特立独行的行为
以上两篇文章均为经典的心理学实验理论分析类型话题,是中国考生最不熟悉的雅思阅读难点的典型代表,文中容易涉及专业知识讲解,看似不易理解,但大部分题型带有顺
序性,建议参考。

相关背景知识阅读:
However much we may abhor it, deception comes naturally to all living things. Birds do it by feigning injury to lead hungry predators away from nesting young.
Spider crabs do it by disguise: adorning themselveswith strips of kelp and other debris, they pretend to be something they are not- and so escape their enemies.
Nature amply rewards successful deceivers by allowing them to survive long enough to mate and reproduce. So it may come as no surprise to learn that human
beings-who, according to psychologist Gerald Jellison of the University of South California, are lied to about 200 times a day, roughly one untruth every five
minutes--often deceive for exactly the same reasons: to save their own skins or to get something they can't get by other means.

But knowing how to catch deceit can be just as important a survival skill as knowing how to tell a lie and get away with it. A person able to spot falsehood quickly is
unlikely to be swindled by an unscrupulous business associate or hoodwinked by a devious spouse. Luckily, nature provides more than enough clues to trap
dissemblers in their own tangled webs--if you know where to look. By closely observing facial expressions, body language and tone of voice, practically anyone
can recognize the telltale signs of lying. Researchers are even programming computers--like those used on Lie Detector--to get at the truth by analyzing the same physical
cues available to the naked eye and ear. "With the proper training, many people can learn to reliably detect lies,
" says Paul Ekman, professor of psychology at the University of California, San Francisco, who has spent the past 15 years studying the secret art of deception.

In order to know what kind of lies work best, successful liars need to accurately assess other people's emotional states. Ekman's research shows that this same
emotional intelligence is essential for good lie detectors, too. The emotional state to watch out for is stress, the conflict most liars feel between the truth and what
they actually say and do.

Even high-tech lie detectors don't detect lies as such; they merely detect the physical cues of emotions, which may or may not correspond to what the person being
tested is saying. Polygraphs, for instance, measure respiration, heart rate and skin conductivity, which tend to increase when people are nervous--as they usually
are when lying. Nervous people typically perspire, and the salts contained in perspiration conduct electricity. That's why a sudden leap in skin conductivity indicates
nervousness--about getting caught, perhaps?--which might, in turn, suggest that someone is being economical with the truth. On the other hand, it might also mean
that the lights in the television studio are too hot--which is one reason polygraph tests are inadmissible in court. "Good lie detectors don't rely on a single sign,"
Ekman says, "but interpret clusters of verbal and nonverbal clues that suggest someone might be lying."

Those clues are written all over the face. Because the musculature of the face is directly connected to the areas of the brain that process emotion, the countenance
can be a window to the soul. Neurological studies even suggest that genuine emotions travel different pathways through the brain than insincere ones. If a patient
paralyzed by stroke on one side of the face, for example, is asked to smile deliberately, only the mobile side of the mouth is raised. But tell that same person a funny
joke, and the patient breaks into a full and spontaneous smile. Very few people--most notably, actors and politicians--are able to consciously control all of their facial
expressions. Lies can often be caught when the liar's true feelings briefly leak through the mask of deception. "We don't think before we feel," Ekman says. "Expressions
tend to show up on the face before we're even conscious of experiencing an emotion."

One of the most difficult facial expressions to fake--or conceal, if it is genuinely felt--is sadness. When someone is truly sad, the forehead wrinkles with grief and the
inner corners of the eyebrows are pulled up. Fewer than 15% of the people Ekman tested were able to produce this eyebrow movement voluntarily. By contrast,
the lowering of the eyebrows associated with an angry scowl can be replicated at will by almost everybody. "If someone claims they are sad and the inner corners
of their eyebrows don't go up," Ekman says, "the sadness is probably false."

The smile, on the other hand, is one of the easiest facial expressions to counterfeit. It takes just two muscles--the zygomaticus major muscles that extend from the
cheekbones to the corners of the lips--to produce a grin. But there's a catch. A genuine smile affects not only the corners of the lips but also the orbicularis oculi,
the muscle around the eye that produces the distinctive "crow's-feet" associated with people who laugh a lot. A counterfeit grin can be unmasked if the lip corners go up, the eyes crinkle but the inner corners of the eyebrows are
not lowered, a movement controlled by the orbicularis oculi that is difficult to fake. The absence of lowered eyebrows is one reason why false smiles look so strained
and stiff.

Passage two

文章新旧


V081108
V100508

题材

商业经济
+气象学

文章标题

Climate and Country Wealth/Wealth in a cold Climate

文章题型

List of Headings
Sentence Completion

文章内容

讲社会发展,和城市的关系还有和城市的发展,有个research 指出 cold weather 跟发达国家的关系成正比,还举了很多例子,但也有人反对,比如说Singapore。讲到天气变化对各地的影响,开头说一个frost席卷了美国,造成全国上下冰冻一片。又对比欧洲、非洲、美国、新加坡、墨西哥,提到一个Master因为在看一本“蚊子的书”的时候想到费城黄热病可能和气温有关,因为很冷,蚊子都冻死了,就没有传染介质了。然后就开始有很多人,写了很多书,做了很多实验,对比了粮食的spread从欧洲到欧洲很快,但是到非洲很慢,最后还提到这个master觉的气温虽然是原因,但影响社会发展的还有其他原因,比如国家基础建设,但是他觉的气候会影响财富,财富影响建设,所以归根结蒂大家互相影响,还有非洲的aids的问题,说不应该知识经济援助他们的政治系统,还应该教他们种东西之类。

部分答案

7个段落名称为A---G:
A: Inspiration
B: Low temperature benefits people and crop
C: The positive correlation between climate and country
D: The spread of crop in European and other countries
E: The wealth influenced by other factors besides climate
F: The traditional view reflecting
G: The best way to use aid
Sentence Completion (不是全篇的,从最后一部分找答案—eye detector 部分找答案)
Singapore,这是一个climate和economy没关系的反例。
Eurasia,后面是than in Africa
Einkorn wheat,文中一个例子
Finland,第三段的例子,小国家但是发展的好。
administrative institutes,钱不应该给他们

Passage three

文章新旧


V100415

题材

人文历史类

文章标题

Cave Art

文章题型

Y/N/NG (5个)
Matching (段落信息配对)5个
Sentence completion
完成句子 5个 (也属于给上句选下句的Matching)

文章内容

有关岩洞艺术的发展历史
往期真题参考:
现在有近350个洞穴在法国和西班牙被发现,包含自史前时代起的艺术。起初,画的年龄是一个有争议的问题,因为像放射性碳测年的方法,会被或旧或新的材料的污染样品误导,而且洞穴和岩石悬(顶叶艺术)通常充斥着很多时期的碎片。 但是,随后的进步使得测定年龄变得有可能:通过采样粉状颜料本身和火把在墙上留下的印记。题材的选择也可以显示时期,例如驯鹿在西班牙洞穴Cueva DE LAS Monedas里被发现就把这种艺术确定在了last Ice Age。
A段首句引出,对岩洞绘画进行了大致的描述。
C段前部分描述了岩画的主题,后部分描述了岩画的图案样式。
D段描述了对于岩画的起源时间是不太确定的。澳大利亚的cave painting
E段后2句描述了手工印制的岩画。泰国,马来西亚,印尼,和缅甸的painting。就是Asia的。
剑桥真题 6 Test 2 Passage 3: Numeration 人类学会使用数字的历史进程
人文社会类话题属于12/13年度的热门考察项目,虽然话题多元,可能涉及人类古代文明,现代科技,各大洲特产发展历史等等,但是文章中时间脉络清晰,定位直接,应注意细心认真对待,避免不必要的失分
参考机经:V100415

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