cet6_2024_06_2
cet6_2024_06_2
Section B
Directions: In this section, you will hear two passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear three or four questions.
Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer
from the four choices marked A),B),C)and D).Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line
through the centre.
Questions 9 to 11 are based on the passage you have just heard.
9. A)They have created the smallest remote-controlled walking robot in the world.
B)They are going to publish their research findings in the journal Science Robotics.
C)They are the first to build a robot that can bend, crawl, walk, turn and even jump.
D)They are engaged in research on a remote-controlled robot which uses special power.
10. A)It changes its shape by complex hardware
B)It is operated by a special type of tiny motor
C)It moves from one place to another by memory
D)It is powered by the elastic property of its body.
11. A)Replace humans in exploratory tasks
B)Perform tasks in tightly confined spaces.
C)Explore the structure of clogged arteries.
D)Assist surgeons in highly complex surgery
Questions 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.
12. A)She threw up in the bathroom.
B)She slept during the entire ride.
C)She dozed off for a few minutes.
D)She boasted of her marathon race.
13. A)They are mostly immune to cognitive impairment.
B)They can sleep soundly during a rough ride at sea.
C)They are genetically determined to need less sleep
D)They constitute about 13 percent of the population.
14. A)Whether there is a way to reach elite status.
B)Whether it is possible to modify one's genes.
C)Whether having a baby impacts one's passion.
D)Whether one can train themselves to sleep less.
15. A)It is in fact quite possible to nurture a passion for sleep.
B)Babies can severely disrupt their parents' sleep patterns
C)Being forced to rise early differs from being an early bird.
D)New parents are forced to jump out of bed at the crack of dawn
Section C
Directions: In this section, you will hear three recordings of lectures or talks followed by three or four questions. The
recordings will be played only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices
marked A),B),C)and D).Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the centre.
The Sun Is Also a Star is a truly lovely story of love, romance, fate, and destiny.
Natasha is a Jamaican-born immigrant living __26__ in America, not by choice exactly. Her parents brought her over
and created the situation she __27__ to be out of.
Daniel is an American born of Korean immigrants. He believes in true love, fate, and all that other nonsense that
Natasha __28__ through scientific reasoning.
Daniel and Natasha meet by __29__ on the streets of New York on the day that she is to be __30__ . She doesn't tell
him that but does allow him to keep her company while he tries to get her to fall in love with him over the course of the day.
Natasha is me. I found her so similar to myself. She's scientifically-minded, practical, somewhat cynical, and always
__31__.Her obsession with the universe through a scientific lens is infectious and I __32__ Daniel seeing that too
Daniel is charming and passionate and has a way with words that even __33__ Natasha's tough outer shell. By the end
of the book I fell in love with both of them.
I used to find romance stories to always be cheap or laughable. I think now I can see the value in escaping into a story
of pure optimism. I got __34__ in The Sun Is Also a Star and finished it cover to cover in a weekend. I couldn't wait to get
to what I hoped would be a happy ending.
It's nice every once in a while to give in to magic. It doesn't have to be a hard fantasy novel with actual spells, it can be
the magic found between two people who just have that special something. That __35__ that causes them to react and spark
when they're near each other
A) adore I) illegally
B) appraise J) lost
C)assaults K) perpetually
D) chemistry L) prescribed
E) coincidence M) shrewd
F) cracks N) skeptical
G) deported O) strives
H) dismisses
Section B
Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains
information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose
a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding
letter on Answer Sheet 2.
These are the habits to avoid if you want to make a behavior change
A)According to recent research, behavioral change involves physical changes in the brain. In the past decade,
researchers have shown that when it comes to the duration of making a new behavior a deep-rooted habit there is not a
simple answer. Even for the most productive and disciplined among us, undoing something that has become an automatic
part of who we are takes more than an overnight effort. Once we've successfully made that change, we then have to make
other adjustments to our lives to ensure that we continue to maintain it, which is often a whole other challenge in itself.
B)At its core, success in changing and maintaining a behavior rarely occurs without the introduction of some sort of
system. When there isn't the right framework in place, we face a greater likelihood of derailing our hard-earned progress. To
ensure success in changing and maintaining a behavior, we should stay away from some detrimental habits
C)The first one to avoid is relying on willpower. Think about the last time you vowed to resist a temptation. Perhaps
you didn't want to check your phone every 15 minutes, or you were determined not to reach for a chocolate bar at 3 p.m.
Think about how difficult it must have been not to glance at your phone when it was within reach, or not to walk to the
vending machine when your afternoon slump hit.
D)The research on whether we have finite or infinite willpower is inconclusive, but experts do generally agree that you
can't change and sustain a habit if you rely on your willpower alone. The old military saying “You never rise to the occasion,
you only sink to the level of training” also applies to behavior change. The idea is simple—you repeat something so many
times that it becomes automatic.
E)Think about what else you can change about your surrounding that makes it easier for you to perform this change on
a daily basis. This is called your “cue”. Basically, it's a trigger to perform that particular habit. If you don't want to reach for
a sugary treat at 3 p.m., have a box of herbal tea ready at your desk. When 3 p.m. comes around, that's your cue to pour
yourself a cup of hot water and drink that tea, instead of walking to the vending machine.
F)The second one to avoid is focusing on negative goals. Sometimes, it's not your process that lets you down, but the
habit that you want to change in the first place. For starters, not eating chocolate to beat your afternoon slump is a harder
goal than swapping chocolate for herbal tea when you reach the designated time. Your brain wants to find routines that have
succeeded in the past and allow you to repeat those actions again in the future without having to think about them explicitly.
However, this habit-learning system isn't so effective when it comes to learning not to do something. That's why rather than
giving up something, think about introducing something in its place. Focus on actions you are going to take that will
ultimately conflict with the behaviors you want to stop. When your attention is on doing something new, you give your
habit system a chance to operate.
G)The third one to avoid is using the same strategies in different circumstances. Because we are creatures of habit, it's
natural to assume that when we do manage to adopt and sustain a desirable behavior, that same strategy will work when we
want to make another behavior change. But that's not always the case. Sometimes, the system that got you to change one
behavior might not work for another.
H)Sometimes we become accustomed to relying on our guts when it comes to decision-making. This serves us well in
certain situations, but can hinder us in others especially when we need to consider metrics and data, rather than letting our
instinct override everything. For example, if you want to stop checking your email first thing in the morning, you might
decide to substitute another activity in its place. But if you want to stop indulging in video games, simply deciding you will
go for a run might not be as effective. You might need to introduce another reinforcement, such as meeting a friend and
booking an exercise class together
I)The fourth one to avoid is not forgiving ourselves for slipping up. Of course, even the best-laid plans fail sometimes.
You might have stuck to your screen-free nighttime routine for five days, and then a big project landed on your desk and
you found yourself in bed with your laptop before you went to sleep. Or you prepared meals on Sunday and stuck to eating
healthy dinners at home, but by Friday you found yourself so exhausted and opted to order greasy takeout. Life happens and
even if your behavior change is small, every single day can prove pretty inflexible, and at some point your luck may run out,
even if just for a day. The perfectionist in you might be screaming to abandon your goals altogether, but try to see it in the
bigger picture. Just because you might have temporarily strayed off course doesn't mean you can't start afresh the next day.
J)The final one to avoid is discounting small progress. There's a habit that many perfectionists tend to fall into when
they try to establish a behavior change. They focus too much on the big goal and don't take the time to celebrate the small
progress they make in the process. Your brain responds to rewards. The basal ganglia, the brain region linked to our
performance of habits, is most active at the beginning of a behavior, when the habit is cued, and at the end, when it's
rewarded. Say your goal is to run five miles three times a week, and this week you ran one mile on Monday, Wednesday,
and Friday. Rather than focusing on how far you've gone toward your goal, think about how you can reward yourself for the
progress you've made. It doesn't have to be big or expensive; it can be something as simple as making your favorite fruit
juice after your run. Whatever your reward, it has to be more than just the activity itself to get you going.
K)Initiating a new behavior usually seems like the hardest part of the process of change. However, people often fail to
adequately prepare for maintaining it. One of the reasons for this is because we mistakenly believe the strategies we used to
initiate the change will be equally effective in helping us continue the change. But they won't. Where changing a strongly
deep-rooted habit requires changing our belief about that habit that penetrates deeply into our lives, continually manifesting
that wisdom requires that we maintain a positive outlook. If our mood is low, the wisdom to behave differently seems to
disappear and we go back to eating more and exercising less. The key, then, to maintaining new behaviors is to be happy!
Which is why it's so hard to maintain new behaviors.
L)Remember, overcoming the behavioral inertia that prevents us from implementing new changes, like eating a
healthy diet or exercising, can benefit us in the long run and can improve our physical and mental health. No one was born
with habits. They were all learned, and can all, therefore, be unlearned. The question is: how badly do you really want to
change?
36.There is general consensus among experts that willpower alone cannot guarantee one's success in changing and
maintaining a habit.
37.One need not abandon their goals completely just because they missed their target temporarily; they can start anew.
38.Research shows it is quite another challenge to maintain a behavioral change after you have initiated it.
39.It is wrong to assume the strategies we use to start a change of behavior will work equally well in helping maintain it.
40.Sometimes, it may not be successful to simply substitute one activity with another to effect a change of habit; you may
need extra reinforcement
41.One should introduce something new to replace an old habit instead of simply kicking it
42.Perfectionists focus too much on their big target and neglect celebrating the small gains they make in the process.
43 It is of great benefit to us in the long term to conquer the inertia that stops us from making behavioral changes.
44.The strategy that successfully changed one of your behaviors may not work for some other behavior of yours.
45.Without a happy mood, it seems that our wisdom to adopt a different behavior vanishes
Section C
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For
each of them there are four choices marked A),B),C)and D).You should decide on the best choice and mark the
corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.
Passage One
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage.
The “American Dream” promises that in the Land of Opportunity, any individual can climb the economic ladder and
prosper through hard work and ambition alone. And yet. young Americans today are struggling to earn more than their
parents did at the same age, and upward mobility in the US actually compares unfavourably to that of other industrialised
nations.
So why does the idea of the American Dream persist? A new study in the American Journal of Political Science
identifies one factor that has been overlooked: the influence of reality TV.
Reality shows have come to dominate US television over the past 20 years, notes Eunji Kim from Vanderbilt
University. And the overwhelming majority of these have a “rags-to-riches” storyline: they feature ordinary Americans who
work hard to achieve great economic success. And while these programmes are regularly among the most-watched shows,
news broadcasts—which paint a more realistic view of the economic hardship faced by millions of Americans—get a much
smaller proportion of the viewership
Rags-to-riches stories are ubiquitous (无处不在的) on TV—but does watching these programmes actually convince
people that economic mobility is easily attainable? To find out, Kim's team had participants watch a 5-minute clip from a
reality show with a rags-to-riches storyline. Control participants watched a clip from a reality show that didn't have a rags-
to-riches story. After watching the shows, participants rated how much they agreed with four statements relating to the
American Dream
The results showed that those who'd watched a rags-to-riches clip did indeed have a significantly greater belief in the
American Dream. Interestingly, when participants were separated by party affiliation, this effect was significant among
Republicans but not Democrats, suggesting that the kind of messages implicit in these TV shows may play into people's
existing socioeconomic beliefs.
Kim also conducted a survey of 3,000 US residents. They also rated the extent to which they believed success in life is
related to various internal factors (such as ambition) and external factors (such as family wealth). Finally, they read a list of
TV programmes and indicated which they regularly watched.
Participants who were heavy viewers of rags-to-riches programmes or frequent viewers had a stronger belief in the
American Dream than those who never watched such shows.
Kim concludes that “rags-to-riches entertainment media are an important cultural force that promotes and perpetuates
beliefs in upward mobility”. And here's the problem: if people mistakenly believe that hard work is all that is needed for
individuals to make a better life for themselves, they may be less supportive of policies that could actually combat
inequality.
“In this era of choice, entertainment media are what captures hearts and minds,” Kim writes. “Its political
consequences are anything but trivial”.
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子一直被视为中华民族品格的象征。
KEYS