Doctors sometimes use light therapy to treat a form of depression in people who get too little morning sun. But too much light at other times may actually cause such mood disorder. Long-lasting exposure to light at night brings depression, a new study finds, at least in animals.
The new data confirm observations from studies of people who work night shifts, says Richard Stevens of the University of Connecticut Health Center. Mood disorders join a growing list of problems, including cancer, obesity and diabetes that can occur when light throws life out of balance by disturbing the biological clock and its timing of daily rhythms.
In the new study, Tracy Bedrosian and Randy Nelson of Ohio State University exposed mice to normal light and dark cycles for four weeks. For the next four weeks, half of the mice remained on this schedule, and the rest received continuous dim light throughout their night. Compared with mice exposed to normal night-time darkness, those getting dim light at night lost their strong preference for sweet drinks. “A sign that they no longer get pleasure out of activities they once enjoyed,” Bedrosian says.
In a second test, mice were clocked on how long they actively tried to escape a pool of water. Those exposed to night lights stopped struggling and just floated in the water, a sign of “behavioral despair”, 10 times as long as the mice that had experienced normal night-time darkness. All symptoms of depression disappeared within two weeks of the mice returning to a normal light-dark cycle, the researchers report. The scientists could also quash the behavioral symptoms by injecting the brains of animals with a drug that prohibits the activity of certain molecules linked with human depression. This finding further suggests that light at night may cause something related to depression.
Human studies linking night-time light and mood disorders are important but can not easily detect molecular underpinnings(分子基础) as animal studies can, says George Brainard of Thomas Jefferson University. The new work, he says, suggests that the change of the biological clock by light at night can be “an extremely powerful force in regulating biology and behavior”.After being exposed to continuous night-time light, the mice __________.
A.changed their preferences |
B.escaped from the water more eagerly |
C.remained active as before |
D.showed less interest in their favorites |
What does the underlined word “quash” in paragraph 4 probably mean?
A.study | B.predict |
C.ease | D.cause |
We can learn from the last paragraph that _______________.
A.light at night may have practical value |
B.the biological clock is beneficial to humans |
C.human mood disorders cannot be healed easily |
D.human studies are more important than animal studies |
What is the main idea of the passage?
A.Night-time light may cause depression. |
B.A drug has been found to cure mood disorders. |
C.The study on animals can be applied to humans. |
D.Human biological clock can be controlled by light. |
A group of swimmers has described how a group of dolphins protected them from a group of white sharks (食人鲨)off the coast of New Zealand. The lifeguards were on a training swim when they came across a group of great white sharks before the dolphins raced in to help.
The swimmers were surrounded by the dolphins for forty minutes before they were able to make them safety back to the beach. It was an uncomfortable experience as they were circled by a group of white sharks, which came within a couple of meters of them. Lifeguard Rob Howes was in the water with a colleague and his teenage daughter. He said around half a dozen dolphins suddenly appeared and forced them to gather together. The mammals swam in tight circles to create a protective wall between the white sharks and the lifeguards as the great white sharks were under the surface.
The swimmers said the dolphins were extremely upset and repeatedly slapped (拍打) the water with their tails as if to try to prevent the white sharks from attacking them. It’s a day they’ll never forget, especially for one who was on her first day as a volunteer. They have no doubt that the dolphins acted on purpose to protect them. Researchers have said that they’re not surprised. A marine biologist insisted that dolphins, which are considered to be one of the most intelligent mammals, “like to help the helpless.”How many swimmers are attacked by the white sharks?
A.Two. | B.Three. | C.Four. | D.Five. |
It seemed that the dolphins slapped the water with their tails to ____.
A.attack the white sharks and the lifeguards |
B.play with water together for pleasure |
C.stop the lifeguards being harmed by the sharks |
D.attract the white sharks to kill the lifeguards |
The underlined words “a volunteer” refers to____.
A.a lifeguard | B.Rob Howes’s workmate |
C.Rob Howes | D.Rob Howes’s daughter |
Which of the following can be the best title?
A.Dolphins Protect Swimmers from Sharks |
B.Sharks Protect Swimmers from Dolphins |
C.Lifeguards Protect Dolphins from Sharks |
D.Lifeguards Protect Sharks from Dolphins |
John Dalton was born in England in 1766. As a small child, John worked in the fields with his older brother, and helped his father in the cloth-making shop. Most poor boys at that time received no education, but John was lucky to attend a nearby school. John was a good student and loved learning. His teachers encouraged him to study many things.
When he was twelve, he opened his first school in a nearby town, but there was very little money. He had to close his school and work in his uncle’s field.
Three years later, he ran a school in Kendall, England with his brother and a friend. They taught many subjects. There, John studied the weather and the nature around him. He collected butterflies and snails. He did many other scientific tests.
In 1793, John moved to Manchester to teach at New College, and began observing the behavior of gases. He began to think about different elements (元素) and how they are made up of.
In 1808, Dalton published a book, A New System of Chemical Philosophy. His atomic masses were not all careful and exact, but they formed the basis for the modern periodic table (元素周期表).
John Dalton died in 1844 in England. Today, scientists everywhere accept Dalton’s idea of how the atoms were made. A simple country boy showed the world a new way of thinking about the universe and how it is made.The following statements are true except that ________.
A.John Dalton was born into a poor family in England |
B.John Dalton continued his study in a nearby town at 12 |
C.John Dalton worked as a teacher in Kendall at 15 |
D.John Dalton began to think about how things are formed at 27 |
We can learn that _______ from the fifth paragraph.
A.the book A New System of Chemical Philosophy is useless |
B.John Dalton shouldn’t have made so many mistakes in his book |
C.John Dalton was the first to publish the modern periodic table |
D.the modern periodic table was based on John Dalton’s work |
According to the passage, we can infer that _______.
A.John Dalton showed great interest in science when he was young |
B.John Dalton worked as a school student in most of his early years |
C.John Dalton was even more famous when he was 40 years old |
D.if John Dalton had been in the city, he wouldn’t have been successful |
The passage is organized in the order of _______.
A.time | B.importance | C.events | D.space |
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us no later than 48 hours prior to departure. If you (age 10) and your parents choose the tour, how much will you pay for the online tickets?
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You live in the 8th Avenue, and which tour is best for you to Chinatown?
A.Downtown Loop Plus |
B.Uptown Loop Plus |
C.Night Tour |
D.The Gray Line New York Eat and Play Card |
Which of the statement is Not true according to the Ads?
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If you like to enjoy the The Gray Line New York Eat and Play Card, ________.
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A month went by in this manner, but a month was all I could bear.
The memory of Marguerite accompanied me wherever I went. I had loved that woman — still loved her — too much for her suddenly to mean nothing to me. Whatever feelings I might have for her now, I had to see her again. At once.
…
I knew Marguerite. Meeting me so unexpectedly must have thrown her into a state of great confusion. Probably, she had heard of my departure which had set her mind at rest as to the consequences of our sudden parting. But, seeing me back and coming face to face with me, weak as I was, she had sensed that my return had a purpose, and must have wondered what was going to happen.
If, when I saw her again, Marguerite had been unhappy; if, in taking my revenge (复仇), there had also been some way of helping her then I might well have forgiven her, and would certainly never have dreamed of doing her any harm. But when I saw her again, she was happy, at least on the surface. Another man had ensured her the wealthy life in which I had been unable to keep her. She brought shame both to my pride and my love; she was going to have to pay for what I had suffered.
I could not remain cold to what she did now. It followed that the thing that would hurt her most would be exactly for me to show coldness. Coldness, therefore, was the feeling which I now needed to pretend, not only in her presence but in the eyes of others.
I tried to put a smile on my face, and I went to call on Prudence with whom Marguerite was
staying.
…
Prudence saw me to the door, and I returned to my apartment with tears of anger in my eyes and thirst for revenge in my heart and thought only of finding a way to make the poor creature suffer. This passage is most probably ______ of a love story.
A.the beginning | B.a chapter |
C.a summary | D.the introduction |
According to the passage, the hero wanted to ______.
A.give Marguerite sufferings because his pride and his love were hurt |
B.stop the relationship with Marguerite because he couldn’t afford a rich life |
C.make up the relationship with Marguerite because he still loved her |
D.forgive Marguerite because he found her unhappy |
What kind of feelings did the hero most probably have?
A.Coldness and love. | B.Coldness and hate. |
C.Love and hate. | D.Hate and sadness. |
What would the author most probably write about next?
A.Why he changed his mind suddenly. |
B.How he made Marguerite suffer. |
C.How he made up his relationship with Marguerite. |
D.Why he wanted Marguerite to pay for what he had suffered. |
Most people know that awkward feeling when you step into an elevator with other people and try not to make eye contact.
But new research suggests it may be down to a subconscious(潜意识的)power struggle being played out as you make your way up or down.
A study found that people decide where they stand based on a micro social grading, established within seconds of entering the lift.
Rebekah Rousi, a Ph.D. student in cognitive science, conducted an study of elevator behaviour in two of the tallest office buildings in Adelaide, Australia.
As part of her research, she took a total of 30 lift rides in the two buildings, and discovered there was an established order to where people tended stand.
In a blog, she writes that more senior men seemed to direct themselves towards the back of the elevator cabins.
She said: 'In front of them were younger men, and in front of them were women of all ages.'
She also noticed there was a difference in where people directed their stare half way through the ride.
Men watched the monitors(监控器), looked in the side mirrors (in one building) to see themselves, and in the door mirrors (of the other building) to also watch others.
'Women would watch the monitors and avoid eye contact with other users (unless in conversation) and the mirrors,' she writes.
The student concluded it could be that people who are shyer stand toward the front, where they can't see other passengers, whereas brave people stand in the back, where they have a view of everyone else.According to Rebekah Rousi, senior men intend to stand ______ of the elevator cabins.
A.in the front | B.in the middle |
C.near the side mirrors | D.at the back |
The underlined word “ them ” in paragraph 7 refers to ______.
A.senior men | B.younger women |
C.younger men | D.Women |
Why do women choose to stand in the front?
A.Because they are too shy to make eye contact with others. |
B.Because they can have a view of everyone else. |
C.Because they want to show their power. |
D.Because they want to watch the monitors. |