2024《试吧大考卷》二轮专题闯关导练英语【新高考】阅读理解技能保分练(二).doc
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1、2024试吧大考卷二轮专题闯关导练英语【新高考】阅读理解技能保分练(二)阅读理解技能保分练(二)细节理解题间接信息类A2020福州质量检测As you move out of your teens and into your 20s and 30s, your musical tastes start to solidify and you likely quit keeping up with popular music. Now, research has found the average age at which your music library is unlikely to ch
2、ange: 33.The studys author reached this conclusion by analyzing data on US. Spotify users and comparing it to artist popularity data from music intelligence company The Echo Nest.To determine the age at which we stop seeking out new tunes, the author gathered selfreported age data from Spotify and l
3、ooked at users “Taste Profiles”, which tracks how many times listeners have streamed music of individual artists. These artists were then matched to their popularity rank on The Echo Nest.The average teen listens almost only to music among the Billboard, the top 200 albums in the country, but this m
4、usic represents a smaller part of their streaming as they age. In their teens, they listen to a lot of the same music, over and over again. Frank T. McAndrew, a professor of psychology at KnoxCollege, explains that thats the “mere exposure effect” at work, and it basically means, the more were expos
5、ed to something, the more we like it.There are many reasons why a person may stop streaming the current top musical hits, and the author looked into one by identifying Spotify listeners with large amounts of childrens music and nursery rhymes in their libraries. In other words, when users may have b
6、ecome parents.But the study concludes with some good news for parents:“If youre getting older and cant find yourself staying as related to the popular music as you used to, have no fearjust wait for your kids to become teenagers, and youll get exposed to all the popular music of the day once again!”
7、1What happens after teens grow older?AThey quit listening to music.BTheir interest in music fades.CThey change their music libraries.DTheir musical tastes become stable.2What is the way of the research?AInterviews.BAnalyzing data.CObservation. DTracking popularity.3How do teens develop their musical
8、 tastes?AThey listen to the same music repeatedly.BThey act like their favorite popular stars.CThey experience different styles of music.DThey like top music worldwide.4Whats the good news for parents in the last paragraph?AParents will regain their faith in music.BParents will influence their teens
9、 in music.CParents will hear their favorite music again.DParents will enjoy the music for teens again.B2020贵州普通高等学校招生适应性测试Theres one easy thing you can do every day to live longer and happier, according to a recent study, and it has nothing to do with diet, exercise, or cutting out bad habits.A revi
10、ew of nearly 150 studies with more than 300,000 participants found that having active social circles decreases your chances of dying by 50 percent, regardless of age, gender or medical history. “When were social, we live longer,” Dr. Kelli Harding noted. “Loneliness is more of a risk factor to healt
11、h than other known risk factors, like high blood pressure and obesity.”The findings are written up in Dr. Hardings new book, The Rabbit Effect, which is about how kindness, rather than laughter, may be the best medicine. The book gets its title from a famous 1978 study of the relationship between ch
12、olesterol (胆固醇) and heart health in rabbits. Researchers accidentally discovered that those rabbits that received the most affection from their human handlers lived much longer than the others.We live in a world where most of our social interactions happen through our phones. But to get the health b
13、enefits of a more active social circle, you dont have to throw away your device and join a book club. More casual interactions with neighbors, shop owners, and others you meet every day can do_the_trick. Increasingly, those relationships can start online. Thats where Nextdoor comes in. The stated pu
14、rpose of the company is “to cultivate a kinder world where everyone has a neighborhood they can depend on”When asked for advice on one thing you can do to live longer and happier, Dr. Harding said it perfectly, “Be kind. Its actually pretty amazing how much each person can make the world a better, k
15、inder, healthier place. It really takes very little and you never know the impact you have on somebody.”5What do we know about The Rabbit Effect?AIts title comes from a study.BIts a report about heart health.CLaughter could cure diseases.DRabbits could help live longer.6Whats the purpose of Nextdoor
16、?ATo advocate online shopping to save time.BTo offer the neighborhood sports facilities.CTo settle the arguments among the families.DTo create a harmonious community to rely on.7What does the underlined phrase “do the trick” in Paragraph 4 mean?AImprove health and wellness.BSet up online relationshi
17、ps.CBuild a happy and warm family.DKeep away from bad habits.8What can be inferred from Dr. Hardings words in the last paragraph?AWe can look for a kind neighborhood.BWe should be kind to animals in the wild.CEvery small act of kindness can make a difference.DAll kinds of social activities can make
18、a better world.C2020武汉市高中毕业生质量检测Yellow is usually the color of happy, joyful emotions. But according to a new study, not all people associate the color with good feelings.To find out what factors might play a role, researchers tested a new hypothesis (假设):What if peoples physical surroundings affect
19、 their feelings about certain colors? For example, if someone lived in cold and rainy Finland, would he feel differently about the color yellow from someone who lived near the Sahara Desert?The researchers looked at coloremotion data from an ongoing international survey of 6,625 people in 55 countri
20、es. The survey asked participants to rate 12 colors on how closely they were associated with feelings including joy, pride, fear, and shame.The researchers paid particular attention to the data for yellow, and analyzed how different factorsincluding hours of sunshine, hours of daylight, and the amou
21、nt of rainfallwere associated with the emotions people reported for the color. The two best predictors of how people felt about yellow were the annual amount of rainfall, and how far they lived from the equator (赤道)Overall, people were more likely to associate yellow with joy when they lived in rain
22、ier countries that lay farther from the equator, researchers reported in the Journal of Environmental Psychology. In Egypt, the likelihood (可能性) of yellow being associated with joy was just 5.7%, whereas in chilly Finland it was 87.7%. In the United States, with its mild climate and amber waves of g
23、rain, peoples yellowjoy association levels were between 60% and 70%.The researchers also checked whether associations changed with the seasonwhether, for example, people in a certain country liked yellow more in the winter than they did in the summer. They found that opinions about the color remaine
24、d fairly constant all year roundeven when the weather changed, the data on yellowjoy associations were as good as gold.9What did the researchers do before the survey?AThey went to Finland.BThey made an assumption.CThey studied certain colors.DThey analyzed some data.10Which of the following affects
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