With the tiny screen bouncing around in front of us, tinny sound quality and frequent interruptions, watching a movie during a f

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问题     With the tiny screen bouncing around in front of us, tinny sound quality and frequent interruptions, watching a movie during a flight is hardly an immersive experience. Yet, frequent fliers may have found themselves—or at least witnessed others—welling up at the most innocuous of films while on a long airline journey. Even lighthearted comedies such as Bee Movie, Bridesmaids and The Simpsons can trigger the water works in passengers who would normally remain dry-eyed if watching these on the ground. One major airline has gone as far as issuing " emotional health warnings" before inflight entertainment that might upset its customers.
    "There hasn’t been much research done on this in the past as for healthy people these do not pose much of a problem," says Jochen Hinkelbein, president of the German Society of Aerospace Medicine and assistant medical director for emergency medicine at the University of Cologne. " But as air travel has become cheaper and more popular, older and less fit people are travelling by air. This is leading to more interest in the field. " Hinkelbein is one of the researchers who are now examining how the conditions we experience on flights can affect the human body and mind.
    There can be no doubt that aircraft cabins are peculiar places for humans to be. They are a weird environment where the air pressure is similar to that atop an 8,00oft-high (2. 4km) mountain. The humidity is lower than in some of the world’s driest deserts while the air pumped into the cabin is cooled as low as 10℃ (50F) to whisk away the excess heat generated by all the bodies and electronics onboard. The reduced air pressure on airline flights can reduce the amount of oxygen in passengers’ blood between 6 and 25%, a drop that in hospital would lead many doctors to administer supplementary oxygen. For healthy passengers, this shouldn’t pose many issues, although in the elderly and people with breathing difficulties, the impact can be higher.
    For those who are already nervous fliers, there is perhaps some more bad news. "Anxiety levels can increase with hypoxia," explains Valerie Martindale, president of the Aerospace Medical Association at King’s College London. Anxiety is not the only aspect of mood that can be affected by flying. A number of studies has shown spending time at altitude can increase negative emotions like tension, make people less friendly, decrease their energy levels and affect their ability to deal with stress.
    Then there is also research showing altitude can also make people feel happier. But Stephen Groening, a professor of cinema and media at the University of Washington, believes this happiness may also manifest itself as tears. The boredom on a flight and relief given by an inflight movie, combined with the privacy of the small screen and headphones used to watch one, could lead to tears of joy, not sadness, he says. "The configuration of inflight entertainment apparatus produce an affect of intimacy that might lead to heightened emotional responses," says Groening. " Crying on airplanes actually consists of tears of relief.
According to Valerie Martindale, ________.

选项 A、fliers with mental problems are especially vulnerable on plane
B、most passengers do not enjoy long-distance flight
C、flight passengers can keep negative emotions in control
D、hypoxia can cause passengers to be moody and grumpy

答案D

解析 细节题。根据题干关键词Valerie Martindale定位到第四段。瓦莱丽.马丁代尔认为在高空上飞行由于缺氧,不仅会增加一个人的焦虑程度,也会增加一些其他的负面情绪,如紧张、不友好、抗压能力下降等,因此答案选[D]。[A][B]没有提到,[C]与文意相反。
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