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
A Very Special Dog A)It is 8:15 a.m. A flight lands at Melbourne’s Tullamarine International Airport. Several hundred pieces of
A Very Special Dog A)It is 8:15 a.m. A flight lands at Melbourne’s Tullamarine International Airport. Several hundred pieces of
admin
2015-01-31
102
问题
A Very Special Dog
A)It is 8:15 a.m. A flight lands at Melbourne’s Tullamarine International Airport. Several hundred pieces of baggage are rushed from the plane onto a conveyor belt in the baggage reclaim annexe. Over the sound of roaring engines, rushing air vents and grinding generators, a dog barks. Florence, a sleek black labrador, wags her tail.
B)Among the cavalcade of luggage passing beneath Florence’ s all-smelling nose, is a nondescript hardback suitcase. Inside the case, within styrofoam casing, packed in loose pepper and coffee, wrapped in freezer paper and heat-sealed in plastic, are 18 kilograms of hashish.
C)The cleverly concealed drugs don’t fool super-sniffer Florence, and her persistent scratching at the case alerts her handler. Florence is one of a truly new breed: the product of what is perhaps the only project in the world dedicated to breeding dogs solely to detect drugs. Ordinary dogs have a 0.1% chance of making it in drug detection. The new breeding programme, run by the Australian Customs, is so successful that more than 50% of its dogs make the grade.
D)And what began as a wholly practical exercise in keeping illegal drugs out of Australia may end up playing a role in an entirely different sphere—the comparatively esoteric world of neurobiology. It turns out that it’ s not Florence’ s nose that makes her a top drug dog, but her unswerving concentration, plus a few other essential traits.
E)Florence could help neurobiologists to understand both what they call "attention processing", the brain mechanisms that determine what a person pays attention to and for how long, and its flip side, problems such as Attention Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder(ADHD). As many as 3 to 5% of children are thought to suffer from the condition in the US, where the incidence is highest, although diagnosis is often controversial.
F)The Australian Customs has used dogs to find drugs since 1969. Traditionally, the animals came from pounds and private breeders. But, in 1993, fed up with the poor success rate of finding good dogs this way, John Vandeloo, senior instructor with the Detector Dog Unit, joined forces with Kath Champness, then a doctoral student at the University of Melbourne, and set up a breeding programme.
G)Champness began by defining six essential traits that make a detector dog. First, every good detector dog must love praise because this is the only tool trainers have at their disposal, but the dog must still be able to work for long periods without it.
H)Then it needs a strong hunting instinct and the stamina to keep sniffing at the taxing rate of around 300 times per minute. The ideal detector is also fearless enough to deal with jam-packed airport crowds and the roaring engine rooms of cargo ships.
I)The remaining two traits are closely related and cognitive in nature. A good detector must be capable of focusing on the task of searching for drugs, despite the distractions in any airport or dockside. This is what neurobiologists call "selective attention". And finally, with potentially tens of thousands of hiding places for drugs, the dog must persevere and maintain focus for hours at a time. Neurobiologists call this "sustained attention".
J)Vandeloo and Champness assess the dogs’ abilities to concentrate by marking them on a scale of between one and five according to how well they remain focused on a toy tossed into a patch of grass.
K)Ivan scores a feeble one. He follows the toy, gets half-way there, then becomes distracted by places where the other dogs have been or by flowers in the paddock. Rowena, on the other hand, has phenomenal concentration; some might even consider her obsessive. When Vandeloo tosses the toy, nothing can distract her from the searching, not other dogs, not food. And even if no one is around to encourage her, she keeps looking just the same. Rowena gets a five.
L)A person’s ability to pay attention, like a dog’s, depends on a number of overlapping cognitive behaviours, including memory and learning—the neurobiologist’ s attention processing.
M)Attention in humans can be tested by asking subjects to spot colours on a screen while ignoring shapes, or to spot sounds while ignoring visual cues, or to take a ’vigilance test’. Sitting a vigilance test is like being a military radar operator. Blips appear on a cluttered monitor infrequently and at irregular intervals. Rapid detection of all blips earns a high score. Five minutes into the test, one in ten subjects will start to miss the majority of the blips, one in ten will still be able to spot nearly all of them and the rest will come somewhere in between.
N)Vigilance tasks provide signals that are infrequent and unpredictable—which is exactly what is expected of the dogs when they are asked to notice just a few odour molecules in the air, and then to home in on the source. During a routine mail screen that can take hours, the dogs stay so focused that not even a postcard lined with 0.5 grams of heroin and hidden in a bulging sack of letters escapes detection.
O)With the current interest in attentional processing, as well as human conditions that have an attention deficit component, such as ADHD, it is predicted that it is only a matter of time before the super-sniffer dogs attract the attention of neurobiologists trying to cure these conditions.
There are diversified methods to examine people’s attention like spotting colours instead of images or distinguishing auditory clues rather than seeing.
选项
答案
M
解析
根据关键词“spot colours”定位于M段第一句.“Attention in humans can betested by asking subjects to spot colours on a screen while ignoring shapes,or to spotsounds while ignoring visual cues.”题干意思是有很多种方法来测试人类的注意力。例如让他们辨识颜色而忽略形象,或者辨别声音而不是视觉。题干“auditory clues”(听觉线索)即原文sounds的同义转述,因此,正确答案是M。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/7Jh7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Thereare30%ofAmericanwomenwhodevelopcancer.B、Non-smokingwomengetlungcancermoreeasilythannonsmokingmen.C、Tob
A、Over87,000workerswilllosetheirjobsinautocompanies.B、Manypeoplewillhavetosaybye-byetotheirhighsalaries.C、T
A、Themanwastheonlysurvivorofanaircrash.B、Peopleonboardwerefrightenedandtriedtoescape.C、Themanhasalwaysbee
A、Themanshouldgofortheexchangeprogram.B、ThemanshouldnotgototheU.S.for3months.C、Manypeoplewanttogoforthe
A、ThesizeofCardiff.B、ThedifferencebetweenLondonandEdinburgh.C、TheimportanceofManchester.D、ThepopulationofEdinbu
ImprovingthebalancebetweentheworkingpartofthedayandtherestofitisagoalofagrowingnumberofworkersinrichWe
ImprovingthebalancebetweentheworkingpartofthedayandtherestofitisagoalofagrowingnumberofworkersinrichWe
ImprovingthebalancebetweentheworkingpartofthedayandtherestofitisagoalofagrowingnumberofworkersinrichWe
A、PostinghomemadevideooraudioontheInternet.B、SpecializinginmouthingBackstreetBoys’songs.C、Makingaudioorvideoin
A、Theworld’spopulationin2030.B、Theresourcescrisisby2030.C、Theworseningofenvironmentby2030.D、Severalmeasuresto
随机试题
党的十八大根据我国经济社会发展的实际,在十六大、十七大确立的全面建设小康社会目标的基础上,对我国的发展提出了新的更高要求,明确指出:确保到2020年实现全面建成小康社会,确保()
下列哪个属于社区诊断所需的信息
至阴位于大敦位于
试通电和试运转前,应制订技术方案,其内容应包括()。
某企业属于以境内外全部生产经营活动申请并经认定的高新技术企业。2018年度境内所得应纳税所得额为150万元,全年已经预缴税款10万元,来源于境外税前所得50万元,境外实纳税款10万元,该企业当年汇算清缴应补(退)的税款为()万元。
甲公司为一综合服务公司,2015年11月,发生业务如下:(1)下设一旅游公司接待一200人的旅游团,每人收取旅游费1500元,另支付给其他单位住宿费200元/人,餐费50元/人,旅游景点门票350元/人,支付本公司导游费用150元/人。
定期租船条件下,船东负责租船人分别负责()。
小王从家走到考试地点,每小时走3公里,到考试地点后,发现忘了带准考证,立即掉头沿原路返回,每小时跑了6公里,到家后毫不耽搁,取了准考证立即赶往考试地点,每小时跑5公里,那么整个过程中小王的平均速度是每小时多少公里?
书最早是以昂贵的手稿复制品出售的,印刷机问世后,就便宜多了。在印刷机问世的最初几年里,市场上对书的需求量成倍增长。这说明,印刷品书籍的出现刺激了人们的阅读兴趣,大大增加了购书者的数量。以下哪项如果为真,最能质疑上述论证?
在利用结构化开发生命周期法开发系统时,在整个开发过程中最重要的环节是
最新回复
(
0
)