We’re fairly good at judging people based on first impressions, thin slices of experience ranging from a glimpse of a photo to a

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问题        We’re fairly good at judging people based on first impressions, thin slices of experience ranging from a glimpse of a photo to a five-minute interaction, and deliberation can be not only extraneous but intrusive.In one study of the ability she dubbed "thin slicing", the late psychologist Nalini Ambady asked participants to watch silent 10-second video clips of professors and to rate the instructor’s overall effectiveness.Their ratings correlated strongly with students end-of-semester ratings.Another set of participants had to count backward from 1,000 by nines as they watched the clips, occupying their conscious working memory.Their ratings were just as accurate, demonstrating the intuitive nature of the social processing.
       Critically, another group was asked to spend a minute writing down reasons for their judgment, before giving the rating.Accuracy dropped dramatically.Ambady suspected that deliberation focused them on vivid but misleading cues, such as certain gestures of utterances, rather than letting the complex interplay of subtle signals form a holistic impression.She found similar interference when participants watched 15-second clips of pairs of people and judged whether they were strangers, friends, or dating partners.
       Other research shows we’re better at detecting deception and sexual orientation from thin slices when we rely on intuition instead of reflection."It’s as if you’re driving a stick shift," says Judith Hall, a psychologist at Northeastern University, "and if you start thinking about it too much, you can’t remember what you’re doing.But if you go on automatic pilot, you’re fine.Much of our social life is like that."
       Thinking too much can also harm our ability to form preferences College students’ ratings of strawberry jams and college courses aligned better with experts’ opinions when the students weren’t asked to analyze their rationale.And people made car-buying decisions that were both objectively bet¬ter and more personally satisfying when asked to focus on their feelings rather than on details, but only if the decision was complex—when they had a lot of information to process.
       Intuition’s special powers are unleashed only in certain circumstances.In one study, participants completed a battery of eight tasks, including four that tapped reflective thinking ( discerning rules.comprehending vocabulary) and four that tapped intuition and creativity ( generating new products or figures of speech).Then they rated the degree to which they had used intuition ("gut feelings," "hunches," "my heart" ).Use of their gut hurt their performance on the first four tasks, as expected, and helped them on the rest.Sometimes the heart is smarter than the head.
When you are making complex decisions, it is advisable to ___________.

选项 A、follow your feelings
B、list your preferences
C、seek expert advice
D、collect enough data

答案A

解析 根据题干关键词making complex decisions定位第四段最后一句“And people made car-buying decisions that were both objectively better and more personally satisfying when asked to focus on their feelings rather than on details, but only if the decision was complex—when they had a lot of information to process”,当人们被要求关注自己的感受而不是细节时,他们做出的购车决定客观上更好,个人也更满意,但前提是当他们有很多信息需要处理时,这个决定是复杂的。A项“跟随你的感受”与文章表述一致,故选A。B项“列出你的偏好”、C项“征求专家意见”、D项“收集足够的数据”与文章表述不符,故均排除。
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