Our social relations are changing and technology is at the center of this unfolding story. Take stock of your own world. You pro

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问题     Our social relations are changing and technology is at the center of this unfolding story. Take stock of your own world. You probably have a few family members and friends who mean the world to you. Then there are the many acquaintances contacts, "followers" and "consequential strangers" who you only interact with occasionally but who serve useful purposes when you have questions, need to make decisions or require a helping hand. Your ties to all of them, especially those in the outer reaches of your network, are increasingly mediated through digital technology—from email to Facebook to Skype calls.
    This new social operating system has been emerging for several generations but has accelerated in growth thanks to the recent triple revolution: the widespread adoption of broadband, ubiquitous mobile connectivity and the move from bounded groups—largely closed circles of interlinked contacts—to multiple social networks.
    We have dubbed the result networked individualism because loose-knit networks are overtaking more densely knit groups and traditional hierarchies as the dominant structure of social interaction. In the world of networked individuals, the individual is the focus, not the family, the work unit, the neighborhood or the social group. Each person creates their own network tailored to their needs, maintaining it through their email address and address book, screen name, social and technological filters, and cellphone number.
    This revolution doesn’t mean physical isolation, as some fear. People still value neighbors, because they remain important for everyday socializing and emergencies. Yet neighbors are only about 10 percent of our significant ties. While people see co-workers and neighbors often, the most important contacts tend to be with people who live elsewhere in the city, region, nation—and abroad. The new media are able to facilitate such contact, and, in effect, have become the neighborhood. And it is heavily populated. Data from the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project suggests that more than two-thirds of American adults and three-quarters of teenagers have become online content creators through social media and rankings, ratings, commenting and remixing applications. In this world, people can easily locate and connect with others who share their tastes, lifestyles, politics or professional aspirations.
    With such a fundamental social shift linked to still-developing technology, how it unfolds needs to be considered. Evolving social norms will push both ways. Some will encourage openness as people want to connect; others will encourage limits as the hassled and hard-pressed withdraw occasionally. In short, the world will fragment, with some parts moving towards the brighter side of networked individualism and other parts moving towards gated communities and more tightly controlled information flows.
    The triple revolution has given rise to far-reaching consequences, though it is not yet clear what the outer-most points of impact will be. What is evident is that networked individualism is tightly tied to technological changes on the horizon and that the time is ripe to contemplate the shape of things to come.
Paragraph 1 mainly tells us that________.

选项 A、the relation between technology and social life has changed
B、modes of online communication are now changing rapidly
C、interpersonal contacts are pushing digital technology forward
D、digital technology brings significant changes to social relations

答案D

解析 主旨大意题。第一段第一句提到,我们的社会关系正在发生变化,而技术是这个变化的中心,第二、三句表示你认识很多人,最后一句表示你与所认识的人之间的联系越来越依靠电子技术。由此可知,科技给人们的社交关系带来了巨大的变化,故D项为答案。文中没有提到科技和社会生活的关系,没有强调在线交流模式的发展,也没有提到人际交往是否推动了电子技术的发展,故排除其他三项。
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