首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
考研
Harold Varmus is a man on a mission—a quest to liberate scientific knowledge from the bounds of journals and copyrights and make
Harold Varmus is a man on a mission—a quest to liberate scientific knowledge from the bounds of journals and copyrights and make
admin
2015-12-28
39
问题
Harold Varmus is a man on a mission—a quest to liberate scientific knowledge from the bounds of journals and copyrights and make it free to all. This is no small issue to the Nobel winner, cancer researcher, and president of Memorial Sioan-Kettering Cancer Center.【C1】______
To Varmus, what scientists do, how they think, and what they write should be immediately and freely available online throughout the world. And if taxpayers support science, he says, sharing should be mandatory. Varmus began promoting "open access" in 1999 during his last year as director of the National Institutes of Health(NIH). Later, with a few colleagues and heavy philanthropic support, he established the Public Library of Science to show the way by publishing several prestigious open-access journals. Historically, scientific journals pay for peer reviews, editing, and other costs through ads and subscription fees.【C2】______By contrast, the open-access model calls for the researchers(or their grants)to pay for publishing at a cost of some $2,000 to $3,000 or more per article.
It sounds sensible, but the author-pay approach has faced resistance on several fronts. Some scientists, particularly those younger and less well funded, worry that the fees will limit their publishing.【C3】______Journals fault a model that burdens relatively few researchers with costs now shared by the large reader base. And others worry about government intrusion.
The push-back is something Varmus concedes he underestimated. But he got an inkling when an effort he led in 2000 fell flat. Thousands of scientists had pledged to boycott journals unwilling to make their articles free through the National Library of Medicine, but few kept their promise. Scientific careers still depend greatly on publishing in established journals. But Varmus persisted. He stressed that lay readers, not just scientists, were being deprived of knowledge. And now, more organizations are endorsing the concept.
Varmus, 67, admits that the project has consumed more time than he had hoped. But it is succeeding so far because of his leadership. On this, he gives a nod to his Nobel Prize. "I don’t believe that some of the things that I’ve been able to do in the last few years would have been possible without that little ornament," he says.
【C4】______At Sloan-Kettering, as he did at NIH, he walks around tieless and carrying a backpack, and he works alongside students in his own research lab.
As he does, he urges researchers to go beyond the lab, to become scientific activists for a better world.【C5】______The common language of science not only can help solve problems, he says; it also can unite people across unfriendly borders.
A. It’s more than that, though. Informing his leadership is a passion for science—with its "special powers and special beauties"—and his identity as a working scientist, not just an administrator.
B. If we speak that language, Varmus says, "we’ll build one world. If we don’t, we’re going to live in a fragmented world, as we do now."
C. Access to scientific literature is only one step; poorer nations also need a greater share of scientific investment, he says.
D. In fact, it is symbolic of Varmus’s view that science is critical to improving the human condition and, thus, must be shared.
E. A bill in Congress would require scientists supported by the NIH to submit work only to journals that agree to make it free online within a year.
F. Subscriptions often amount to hundreds of dollars per year, posing financial hurdles to readers, especially when multiplied by many journals.
G. Others are concerned that hundreds of millions of NTH dollars will be diverted from research and into publishing.
【C2】
选项
答案
F
解析
根据该段出现的信息词pay for…through…,pay for…at a cost of…说明该段应与期刊费用有关。F通过hundreds of dollars,financial hurdles等信息词说明期刊给读者造成的经济负担,与文中内容相符,故为正确选项。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/UQsZ777K
0
考研英语一
相关试题推荐
【F1】We’removing;intoanotherera,asthetoxiceffectsofthebubbleanditsgraveconsequencesspreadthroughthefinancials
【F1】We’removing;intoanotherera,asthetoxiceffectsofthebubbleanditsgraveconsequencesspreadthroughthefinancials
We’removingintoanotherera,asthetoxic(有毒的)effectsofthebubble(泡沫)anditsgraveconsequencesspreadthroughthefinancial
We’removingintoanotherera,asthetoxic(有毒的)effectsofthebubble(泡沫)anditsgraveconsequencesspreadthroughthefinancial
WholesalepricesinJulyrosemoresharplythanexpectedandatafasterratethanconsumerprices,【C1】______thatbusinesseswer
WholesalepricesinJulyrosemoresharplythanexpectedandatafasterratethanconsumerprices,【C1】______thatbusinesseswer
Olderpeoplemustbegivenmorechancestolearniftheyaretocontributetosocietyratherthanbeafinancialburden,accordi
随机试题
A.柴胡、白芍、枳实、甘草B.柴胡、白芍、川芎、甘草C.柴胡、白芍、白术、茯苓D.白芍、白术、防风、陈皮E.柴胡、白芍、当归、川芎
从头走足的经脉是
护士指导阿尔茨海默病患者家庭护理要点,以下错误的是
某施工企业当期主营业务成本为9000万元,期初存货为4000万元,期末存货为2000万元。假设该施工企业计算期天数为360d,则本年度的存货周转天数为()d。
下列费用中,不属于分部分项工程费的有()。
下列关于经纪业务客户指令的说法中,正确的是()。Ⅰ.委托人的指令具有权威性,证券经纪商不能自作主张,擅自改变委托人的意愿Ⅱ.当情况发生变化,为了维护委托人的权益不得不变更委托指令,无须事先征得委托人的同意Ⅲ.证券经纪商要严格按照委托人的要求办
猪笼草是一种食虫植物。为了验证猪笼草分泌液中有蛋白酶,某学生设计了两组实验,如下图所示。在35℃水浴中保温一段时间后,甲、乙试管中加入适量的双缩脲试剂,丙、丁试管中不加任何试剂。则实验现象的预测正确的是()。
贤士隐居者士子修己笃学,独善其身,不求知于人,人亦莫能知者,所至或有之,予每惜其无传。比得《上虞李孟传》录示四事,故谨书之。其一日,慈溪蒋季庄,当宣和间,鄙王氏①之学,不事科举,闭门穷经,不妄与人接。高抑崇居明州城中,率一岁四五访其庐。
Whichofthefollowingitalicizedpartisaninflectionalmorpheme?().
Thesearchforoneoflife’sgreatestgoals,happiness,iswhatbringsalmost1,200studentstooneofYaleUniversity’smostpo
最新回复
(
0
)