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
外语
What Dreams Are Made of? A) Ever since Sigmund Freud published his controversial theories about the meaning of dreams in 190
What Dreams Are Made of? A) Ever since Sigmund Freud published his controversial theories about the meaning of dreams in 190
admin
2022-09-18
25
问题
What Dreams Are Made of?
A) Ever since Sigmund Freud published his controversial theories about the meaning of dreams in 1900, we have been fascinated with the experiences we seem to live through while we sleep.
B) Freud was convinced that dreams represent some unfulfilled desires or hoped-for wishes, while later investigators saw a more pragmatic quality to them, as reflection of waking life. None of these theories, however, have had the benefit of much in the way of solid, objective data.
C) At least, until now. Two new developments in research—brain imaging and big data—may offer some stronger answers. More detailed and timely photos of the brain at work, combined with the information researchers collected about dreams from experiments in sleep labs, are gradually peeling away the mystery of dreams, and revealing their meaning.
D) From a strictly biological standpoint, scientists have learned much about the physiological process of dreaming, which occurs primarily in REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep. "During dreaming," says Patrick McNamara, a neurologist (神经病学家) at Boston University School of Medicine and the graduate school of Northcentral University in Prescott Valley, Ariz., "the emotional part gets highly activated while the executive part of the brain is under-activated. So the kind of cognitions we experience during dreams are highly emotional, visually vivid, but often illogical, disconnected and sometimes bizarre." That suggests that our dreams may have some role in emotional stability.
E) That does not necessarily mean, most dream researchers believe, that dreams are random expressions of emotion or lack of intellectual meaning. While some scientists maintain that dream patterns are strictly the result of how different neurons (神经元) in the brain are firing, Deirdre Barrett, a psychologist and dream researcher at Harvard Medical School, believes they represent something more. "I think dreams are thinking in a different biochemical state."
F) Defining that state, not to mention understanding the rules under which that universe operates, however, is a challenge. It may represent a complex interaction between emotional and cognitive information, says McNamara, so that dreams serve to help our brains process emotional memories and integrate them into our long-term memories. And because traumatic (创伤的) events are associated with higher levels of the stress hormone Cortisol (皮质醇) , they can cause nightmares. Researchers believe that excessive amounts of Cortisol can impair the two main brain systems that integrate memory. "The memories don’t get integrated," he says, "but just sit around. In post traumatic stress disorder, they get re-experienced over and over."
G) In fact, from sleep studies in which people were exposed to images, learning tasks or other experiences immediately before they dozed off and then examined when they awakened, many scientists believe that dreams can help us rehearse for challenges or threats we anticipate—emotionally, cognitively and even physiologically. In our dreams we may try out different scenarios to deal with what’s coming up. Although much of the evidence lack of scientific support, McNamara says, someone practicing piano or playing video games in waking life may start to do the same while dreaming. People solving a puzzle or studying a foreign language, he adds, can have breakthroughs with dreams that go beyond the perceptions that simply taking a break from the problem can produce.
H) And now, Barrett says, brain imaging holds the promise of being able to help scientists "see" what until now could only be reported by subjective, possibly inaccurately recalled, dream accounts. For example, in research with rats trained to run through mazes to get rewards, investigators were able to record neuron activity in sleeping rats and determined that the rats were running the same mazes in their dreams.
I) In other experiments with humans, scientists monitored volunteers who slept inside an FMRI (功能性磁共振成像) scanner while hooked up to EEG (脑电图描记器) electrodes that measured brain wave activity. When the EEG indicated they were dreaming, the participants were awakened and asked what images they had seen in their dreams. The investigators were later able to match certain patterns of brain activity to certain images for each person. "There’s a crude correspondence between the brain scan and the image. From the scan, you can guess it’s an animal with four legs," says Barrett. Despite the primitive state of this dream decoding (解码) , the ability to actually get content from a dream is getting closer.
J) Mining big data bases of reported dreams holds another kind of promise. Until now, researchers have been working on relatively small samples of dream accounts, usually fewer than 200 per study. But new dream websites and smartphone apps like DreamBoard and Dreamscloud are encouraging thousands of people to report their dreams so researchers can finally answer their most urgent questions. McNamara, for example, is excited to study dreams from different countries to see whether there are cultural differences in what people’s brains do when they aren’t awake.
K) The data bases also provide an opportunity to investigate the intriguing but understudied realm of sex dreams. Until recently, says McNamara, they represented only 10% of reported dreams, likely because people are not eager to share this type of content with researchers in white lab coats. But self-reporting via the apps and websites, despite its potential biases, may provide more information on these types of dreams. "This is a wide open area crying for investigation," he says.
L) McNamara is also eager to study individuals’ dreams over time to observe differences and changes in emotional tone, colors, words and other significant patterns and connect these to events in their lives. That would bring him closer to answering whether dreams can, in fact, predict things—it might be possible, for example, that certain kinds of dreams precede getting the flu, or that other dreams are more associated with happier events.
M) Such investigations could also reveal more about less welcome dreams, such as nightmares, and potentially lead to ways to control or avoid them. Barrett plans to mine the new database to study how often nightmares occur, and how they relate to an individual’s trauma or a family history of anxiety disorder. One of her first projects will involve the dream data from DreamBoard.com, which has accumulated 165,000 dreams over the last two years. Because DreamBoard has coded the dreams by the gender, colors, emotions (joy, anxiety, anger) and the number and categories of people in a dream, Barrett says she can identify basic patterns.
N) We already know, she says, that women dream equally about men and women while men’s dreams are two-thirds populated by men. Research so far also shows that men’s dreams may show slightly more anger and physical aggression while women’s display a bit more sadness and verbal hostility. Interpreting what these differences mean, however, will require deeper studies.
O) What’s been discovered so far, however, suggests that such studies could reveal an enormous amount about what role dreams play in our lives, and how important they are for biological, psychological or social reasons. With this research, McNamara believes, scientists can find out if what shrinks (精神病学家) have been saying for years is true—that reflecting on our dreams is useful and can give us insight into ourselves. Psychologists say so, and many people think so. But this research, he says, gives us the potential to know.
Many scientists believe that people can emotionally, cognitively and physiologically get more prepared for challenges or threats through dreaming.
选项
答案
G
解析
题干意为,很多科学家相信人们可以通过做梦从情感上、认知上和生理上为挑战或威胁做更好的准备。根据题干中的关键词emotionally, cognitively and physiologically可定位到G段。该段首句中提到,许多科学家相信,梦境能够帮助我们从情感上、认知上,甚至是生理上预演我们预料中的挑战和威胁。由此可知,题干是对原文的同义转述,故选G。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/2ER7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Theywerefrightenedanddistressed.B、Theyswamawaywhenthespeakerwasturnedon.C、Theyswamclosertothespeakerwhent
A、Theywerefrightenedanddistressed.B、Theyswamawaywhenthespeakerwasturnedon.C、Theyswamclosertothespeakerwhent
A、Theworldislackofconsumption.B、Foodandresourcesarenotenough.C、Somecountrieswanttohaveasmallpopulation.D、Hum
A、Freedomfromthestressofworking.B、Freedomfromsocialregulations.C、Freedomfromlaws.D、Freedomfromstudy.A
A、TheirBBSwasnotasgoodaswhattheyhadthoughtbefore.B、Theirprogressinthewebsite-designwashinderedforlackoffun
A、Alargeamountofmoneywasdonatedbyanunknownplayer.B、Aschoolfellowraisedmillionsofdollarsfortheconstruction.C、
A、Ourbiologicalclocksarecontrollablebeforetenyearsold.B、Teenagersshouldlearntocontroltheirbiologicalclocks.C、Sl
A、Reserveahomevisit.B、Calladoctordirectly.C、Fixthehomevisittime.D、CalltheCentresatanytime.A对话中男士提到,如果想让医生到家里治
"Ifitwere【C1】________uptome,Iwouldraisethecigarettetaxsohighthattherevenuesfromitwouldgotozero,"thundered
"Ifitwere【C1】________uptome,Iwouldraisethecigarettetaxsohighthattherevenuesfromitwouldgotozero,"thundered
随机试题
在交往中,人与人之间无论职位高低、能力大小,还是职业差别、经济状况不同,都要一视同仁。既不能自恃清高,看不起别人,也不能自卑自怯,自暴自弃。这体现了人际交往中()
在Windows系统中,当用户为应用程序创建快捷方式时,系统将为该应用程序创建一个备份。()
冷疗目的不包括()。
以下属于宋代刑制中正式入律的有:()
当脚手板采用竹笆板时,纵向水平杆的间距应满足要求()。
在项目可行性研究中,对交通项目的市场分析一般应包含社会发展对()的要求。
理财规划师在帮助客户进行购房规划中,除了房款本身之外,相关税费、装修费、家具电器购置费等也是需要考虑的。其中,申请贷款买房通常需要支付的相关税费款不包括( )。
()是保证公开募集基金稳健运行、保护基金份额持有人利益的必要条件。
根据企业所得税法律制度的规定,下列项目中,属于企业所得税不征税收入的有()。
设函数z=z(z,y)由方程z=e2x-3y+2y确定,则=__________。
最新回复
(
0
)