(51) Being angry increases the risk of injury, especially among men, new research says. The researchers gathered data on mor

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问题     (51) Being angry increases the risk of injury, especially among men, new research says.
    The researchers gathered data on more than 2,400 accident victims at three Missouri hospitals. They interviewed each subject to determine the patient’s emotional state just before the injury and 24 hours earlier, gathering data on whether the patients felt irritable, angry or hostile, and to what degree. Then they compared the results with a control group of uninjured people.
    (52) Despite widespread belief in "road rage." anger did not correlate with injuries from traffic accidents.
    (53) Not surprisingly anger was strongly associated with injuries inflicted deliberately. But other injuries—those neither intentionally inflicted nor from falls or traffic accidents-also showed strong associations with anger.
    (54) The correlations were significantly weaker for women than for men, but there were no differ-ences by race. The authors acknowledge that their data depend on self-reports, which are not always reli-able.
    (55) Why anger correlates with injury is not known, "I can speculate that the anger may have prompted some behavior that led to the injury, or may have simply distracted the person, leading indirectly to the injury," said the study’s lead author.

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答案The connection between irritation and injuries is less obvious on the famales than on the males, but the connection is the same no matter what race people are.

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