2017年6月四级真题第3套.doc
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1、2017年6月大学英语四级考试真题(第三套)Part I Writing (30 minutes)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an advertisement on your campus website to sell a book you used at college. Your advertisement may include its brand, specifications/features, condition and price, and your contact informa
2、tion. You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words.Part Listening Comprehension (25 minutes)(说明:由于2016年12月六级考试全国共考了2套听力,本套真题听力与前2套内容完全一样,只是顺序不一样,因此在本套真题中不再重复出现) Part Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)Section ADirections: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are
3、required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a
4、single line through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.Questions 26 to 35 are based on the following passage.As if you needed another reason to hate the gym, it now turns out that exercise can exhaust not only your muscles, but also your eyes. Fear not, however,
5、for coffee can perk them right up again. During 26 exercise, our muscles tire as they run out of fuel and build up waste products. Muscle performance can also be affected by a 27 called “central fatigue,” in which an imbalance in the bodys chemical messengers prevents the central nervous system from
6、 directing muscle movements 28 . It was not known, however, whether central fatigue might also affect motor systems not directly 29 in the exercise itselfsuch as those that move the eyes. To find out, researchers gave 11 volunteers a carbohydrate 30 either with a moderate dose of caffeinewhich is kn
7、own to stimulate the central nervous systemor as a placebo without, during 3 hours of 31 . After exercising, the scientists tested the cyclists with eye-tracking cameras to see how well their brains could still 32 their visual system. The team found that exercise reduced the speed of rapid eye movem
8、ents by about 8%, 33 their ability to capture new visual information. The caffeinethe equivalent of two strong cups of coffeewas 34 to counteract this effect, with some cyclists even displaying 35 eye movement speeds, the team reports today in Scientific Reports. So it might be a good idea to get so
9、meone else to drive you home after that marathon.A) cautiouslyB) commitC) controlD) cyclingE) effectivelyF) increasedG) involvedH) limitedI) phenomenonJ) preventingK) sensitiveL) slowingM) solution N) sufficientO) vigorousSection BDirections: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten
10、 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 question by marking the corresponding letter on
11、Answer Sheet 2.The Blessing and Curse of the People Who Never ForgetA handful of people can recall almost every day of their lives in enormous detailand after years of research, neuroscientists are finally beginning to understand how they do it.A For most of us, memory is a mess of blurred and faded
12、 pictures of our lives. As much as we would like to cling on to our past, even the saddest moments can be washed away with time.B Ask Nima Veiseh what he was doing for any day in the past 15 years, however, and he will give you the details of the weather, what he was wearing, or even what side of th
13、e train he was sitting on his journey to work. “My memory is like a library of video tapes, walk-throughs of every day of my life from walking to sleeping,” he explains.C Veiseh can even put a date on when those tapes started recording: 15 December 2000, when he met his first girlfriend at his best
14、friends 16th birthday party. He had always had a good memory, but the thrill of young love seems to have shifted a gear in his mind: from now on, he would start recording his whole life in detail. “I could tell you everything about every day after that.”D Needless to say, people like Veiseh are of g
15、reat interest to neuroscientists (神经科学专家) hoping to understand the way the brain records our lives. A couple of recent papers have finally opened a window on these peoples extraordinary minds. And such research might even suggest ways for us all to relive our past with greater clarity.E Highly super
16、ior autobiographical memory (or HSAM for short), first come to light in the early 2000s, with a young woman named Jill Price. Emailing the neuroscientist and memory researcher Jim McGaugh one day, she claimed that she could recall every day of her life since the age of 12. Could he help explain her
17、experiences?F McGaugh invited her to his lab, and began to test her: he would give her a date and ask her to tell him about the world events on that day. True to her word, she was correct almost every time.G It didnt take long for magazines and documentary film-makers to come to understand her “tota
18、l recall”, and thanks to the subsequent media interest, a few dozen other subjects (including Veiseh) have since come forward and contacted the team at the University of California, Irvine.H Interestingly, their memories are highly self-centred: although they can remember “autobiographical” life eve
19、nts in extraordinary detail, they seem to be no better than average at recalling impersonal information, such as random (任意选取的) lists of words. Nor are they necessarily better at remembering a round of drinks, say. And although their memories are vast, they are still likely to suffer from “false mem
20、ories”. Clearly, there is no such thing as a “perfect” memorytheir ordinary minds are still using the same flawed tools that the rest of us rely on. The question is, how?I Lawrence Patihis at the University of Southern Mississippi recently studied around 20 people with HSAM and found that they score
21、d particularly high on two measures: fantasy proneness (倾向) and absorption. Fantasy proneness could be considered as a tendency to imagine and daydream, whereas absorption is the tendency to allow your mind to become fully absorbed in an activityto pay complete attention to the sensations (感受) and t
22、he experiences. “Im extremely sensitive to sounds, smells and visual detail,” explains Nicole Donohue, who has taken part in many of these studies. “I definitely feel things more strongly than the average person.”J The absorption helps them to establish strong foundations for a recollection, says Pa
23、tihis, and the fantasy proneness means that they revisit those memories again and again in the coming weeks and months. Each time this initial memory trace is “replayed”, it becomes even stronger. In some ways, you probably go through that process after a big event like your wedding daybut the diffe
24、rence is that thanks to their other psychological tendencies, the HSAM subjects are doing it day in, day out, for the whole of their lives.K Not everyone with a tendency to fantasize will develop HSAM, though, so Patihis suggests that something must have caused them to think so much about their past
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