WHEN there are some strangers in front of us, which of them will we trust?
According to a new study in the online PloS One (《公共科学图书馆·综合》), people make their decisions to trust others largely based on their faces. Your appearance can do a lot for you, especially if you are in the financial industry. The more trustworthy you look, the more likely people will buy what you’re selling.
Researchers from Britain’s University of Warwick Business School, University College London, and Dartmouth College, US, did a number of experiments.
The research team used computer software to make 40 faces, from the least to the most trustworthy-looking.
The study said that the difference between a trustworthy face and one that isn’t as trustworthy comes from features that look slightly angry or slightly happy, even when the face is at rest. However, a slightly happy face is more likely to be trusted.
Researchers gave participants some money and asked them which face they trusted to invest the money for them. Then researchers gave some good and bad information about the people with these faces, and asked the participants again whom they trusted.
The results showed that even if they got different information, the participants didn’t change their choices. They were still more likely to invest their money with the more trustworthy-looking faces.
Chris Olivola, one of the study’s authors, said in the University of Warwick’s press release: “It seems we are still willing to go with our own instincts (本能) about whether we think someone looks like we can trust them. The temptation (诱惑) to judge strangers by their faces is hard to resist.”
Which of the following can be a proper title for this passage?
A.What kind of face do you trust? |
B.Who did the experiments? |
C.Why do you trust him or her? |
D.Why did they do the experiments? |
According to the study, which of the following faces is most likely to be trusted?
A.A sad face. | B.A smiling face. | C.A crying face. | D.An angry face. |
Which of the following about the experiment is TRUE?
A.The trustworthy faces were given good information. |
B.Researchers took photos of the 40 people’s faces in college. |
C.Most participants gave their money to the trustworthy-looking faces. |
D.Participants liked to choose the faces with good information. |
What did the researchers learn from their experiment?
A.People can’t refuse temptations. |
B.People always do things with their instincts. |
C.People often judge strangers by their faces. |
D.People don’t trust strangers with sad faces. |
It was not a good day today. Everything went wrong. First, I slept late and Mom shouted at me to wake up. When I went to the kitchen for breakfast, there was no cereal. I decided to have some toast instead, but I burned it. I had to eat it anyway because there was no more bread. There was no juice, either. I just had a glass of water.
When I was almost at the bus stop, I realized that I had forgotten my wallet, so I had to go back home and get it. Of course, I missed the bus and had to wait for the next bus.
I was late for school and the teacher told me to stay in the classroom at lunchtime to catch up on(弥补)the schoolwork I had missed.
After lunch, it was the time to give the teacher our homework. I reached into my bag to get it but it wasn’t there. I had left it at home. I was in trouble again.
When I got home, I went straight to my room to catch up on my homework. Mom cooked fish for dinner. She knows I don’t like fish, but she thinks it is good for her son. It was a horrible day. I hope tomorrow will be better.What happened to the writer on this bad day?
A.The writer argued with his parents. | B.The writer heard some terrible news. |
C.Many small things went wrong. | D.Part of the writer’s house was on fire. |
When did the writer’s bad day begin?
A.At night | B.In the morning. |
C.At lunchtime. | D.In the afternoon. |
What did the writer do after he went home?
A.He did some homework. | B.He made a telephone call. |
C.He made fun with his friend. | D.He was tired, so he went to bed. |
When you “burn” something, you ___________________.
A.give it away | B.eat it too fast |
C.cook it too long | D.make it very well |
According to the passage, we can know _______________.
A.the writer fell off from his bike | B.the writer went to school |
C.the writer got up early in the morning | D.the writer doesn’t like eating fish |
In the UK, most children have their lunches at school, but in some schools, parents can choose what their children eat. The children can have a school dinner — a hot, cooked meal; or they can take a packed (包装的)lunch with them, which usually includes cold food like sandwiches.
Often parents know what their children want. Cath, a mother of three children, told us, “My children have packed lunches because they say they hate school dinners. So I make three packed lunches every morning.”
However, another mother, Susan, made a different choice. She said, “My daughters have always had school dinners. I think they probably get healthier food at school than a few sandwiches I make for them.”
But how healthy are school dinners? Kaz, a father, thought poorly of them. He said, “Fizzy (起泡的) drinks were offered and I think there were lots of chips.”
Jamie Oliver spent a year working in a school kitchen. He was worried about the unhealthy food which included burgers, pizzas and chips. So he tried to cook healthy food such as good stews(炖肉) and curries (咖喱菜肴) for the children instead.
So Jamie improved the school dinners, and trained the dinner ladies to cook healthy food in that school. Then he advised the government to improve school food across the country. And it seems that the changes have begun.
Anna, a pupil, told us, “we used to have a fast food window where you got chips and coke, but they stopped that this year. There’s salad restaurant, which is good, so it’s healthier than it was.”How many meals do most children in the UK have at school?
A.One | B.Two | C.Three | D.Four |
_______ would like the children to have the school meals.
A.Cath | B.Susan | C.Kaz | D.Jamie |
Jamie thought ______ were healthy food
A.stews and curries | B.burgers and pizzas |
C.chips and fizzy drinks | D.sandwiches and coke |
The last two paragraphs show that________.
A.There’s a salad restaurant in every school |
B.salad is the only healthy food for students |
C.schools have begun to cook healthier food |
D.the government doesn’t care about school dinners |
What is the best title for this text?
A.Healthy Food | B.Unhealthy Food |
C.Packed Lunches | D.School Dinners |
As we know, Human beings each have unique brains. The brain is of the greatest importance to the body. It is the boss of the body.Your eyes,ears,nose,and skin tell your brain what is going on around you.Other parts of your body tell your brain what is going on inside of you.Your brain takes in the signals.It tells your body what to do with them.When you touch fire,your skin tells your brain that your finger is too hot.Your brain tells you to move your finger.All these happen very fast.Your brain also controls your breathing,blinking,and heartbeat.It controls your feelings and thoughts too.
Humans have the most developed brain of all animals.Yet it is not the largest brain.The human brain weighs three pounds.The brain of an elephant weighs 11 pounds.So the largest brain is not always the best brain.In people,a larger brain does not mean a clever person.What is the main idea of this passage?
A.The human brain works very fast. |
B.The largest brain is not always the best brain. |
C.The brain controls the body. |
D.The best brain is the largest brain. |
What happens after the brain takes in the signals from the body?
A.The brain grows faster and larger. | B.The brain tells the body what to do. |
C.The body becomes more developed. | D.We don't know. |
What does “the boss of the body” mean?
A.The signals. | B.The most developed body part. |
C.The main part of the body. | D.The centre of the body. |
Which brain is the most developed?
A.The largest brain. | B.The human brain. |
C.The smaller brain. | D.Not too big brain. |
What are the things that the human brain does?
A.Takes in signals. B.Controls breathing.
C.Controls feelings and thoughts. D.A,B and C.
Officials say an elephant has killed an American woman and her baby while the family was on a tour in Kenya.Kenya Wildlife Service official Michel Kipkeu said Sharon Brown,39, was holding her one-year-old daughter when they were trampled (踩踏) by the elephant Monday.Melia van Laar, owner of the castle Forest Hotel,where the family was walking with a guide about 2 kilometers from the hotel when an elephant came out from the bush at full speed.The father of the family is a teacher in Naiobi.Friends and colleagues held funeral services Wednesday.
From world leaders on the White House lawn to people at the bus stop,the common handshake is the universal greeting of peace and kindness.But young people are kissing goodbye to traditional social etiquette (礼节),killing off the handshake, researchers say.The custom is seen as too formal by many, who prefer to touch fists or blow an air kiss instead.Nearly 74 percent of adults shake hands less than they used to — and only 45 percent of under-25s use the greeting.But many prefer no physical contact at all, a side effect of the growing fear of diseases,according to the survey of 1,000 people.
The growing mountain of e-waste will cause great environmental damage if no new strategies are produced to deal with the discarded televisions, mobile phones and computers,the UN Environment Program (UNEP) study said.Electronic waste is piling up around the world at a rate estimated at 40 million tons a year.China produces 2.6 million tons of electronic waste a year, second only to the United States with 3.3 million tons, it said.LNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner said the globe was ill-prepared to deal with the explosion of electronic products over the past decade.What’s the main idea of the 1
paragraph?
A.Tour in Kenya |
B.Kenya wildlife Service |
C.A one-year-old girl trampled by an elephant |
D.American mother, baby killed by elephant in Kenya |
Yong people wave goodbye to handshakes because
A.they prefer physical contact |
B.many young people think handshaking is too formal |
C.they prefer to touch fists or blow an air kiss |
D.they are not accustomed to handshaking |
What ean be inferred from passage three?
A.America ranks first in producing e-waste a year |
B.China produces 2.6 million tons of electronic waste a year |
C.the globe was ill prepared to deal with the explosion of electronic products |
D.The growlng mountain of e-wasted won’t cause great environmental damage. |
The underlined word“discarded”means
A.disliked | B.deserted | C.scarred | D.scared |
The passages are most likely to appear in a/an
A.brochure | B.science book | C.newspaper | D.magazine |
Each new school year brings fresh reminders of what educators call the summer learning gap.Some call it the summer learning setback Put simply, it means the longer kids are out of school,the more they forget.The only thing they might gain is weight.
Most American schools follow a tradltional nine-month calendar with winter and spring breaks and about ten weeks of summer vacation.Some schools follow a year-round calendar. They hold classes ror about eight weeks at a time,with a few weeks off in between.The National Association for Year-Round Education says there were fewer than 3,000 such schools at last count.They were spread among forty-six of the tifty states.
But many experts point out that the number of class days in a year-round school is generally the same as in a traditional school.Brenda McLaugblin is research director at the National Center for Summer Learning at Johns Hopkins University.She says studies of year-round schooling have not found strong learning gains.Lead researcher Paul von Hippel said,“Year-round schools don’t really solve the problem of the summer learning setback.They simply spread it out across the year.”
Across the country, research shows that students from poor families fall farther behind over the summler than other students.Experts say this can be prevented.They note that many schools and local governments offer programs that can help.
But calling them“summer school”could be a problem.The director of the summer learning center at Johns Hopkins, Ron Fairchild, said research with groups of different parents in Chicago and Baltimore found that almost all strongly disliked the term“summer school”.In American culture,the idea of summer vacation is connected to beliefs about freedom and the joys of childhood.The parents welcomed other terms like“summer camp。”“extra time”and“hands-on learning.”According to the first paragraph,the summer learning gap
A.helps children to gain weight |
B.leads children to work harder |
C.improves children’s memories |
D.affe![]() |
Compared to traditional schools,students in the year-round ones.
A.perform better and have more learning gains |
B.have much less time for relaxation every year |
C.have generally the same number of class days |
D.hold more classes with more free weeks off |
Which of the following statements is true?
A.Students from poor families often fall behind after the vacation. |
B.Year-round schools can solve the problem of the learning gap |
C.There are schools in each state following a year-round calendar |
D.Nothing can help the studen![]() |
Why did almost all parents dislike the term“summer school”?
A.They are worried about the quailty of the“summer school” |
B.They cherish the children’s rights of freedom very much. |
C.They want their children to be forced to make up the gap. |
D.They can’t afford to the further study during the vacation. |
What would be the best title of this passage?
A.Opening Summer Camps |
B.Forbidding Summer Schools |
C.Minding the Summer Learning Gap |
D.Reforming Year-Round Education |