The human face may have been built for certain basic functions 一 eating,breathing,seeing — but the 43 separate muscles that keep it constantly moving mean it is constantly communicating too. For example,every eyebrow lift means something. That's good news for a small growing field of business that uses facial analysis to figure out if an advertisement or a TV pilot(實驗性節(jié)目) appeals to consumers.
Affectiva,a 30-person operation in America,is the most successful of these companies. A decide ago,Rana el Kaliouby began collecting video samples (樣本) of faces with the goal of helping autistic(患自閉癥的) children. “Autistic kids have a hard time reading faces,” she says, “so the plan was to design a system that tells them that the person they’ re talking to is smiling,say,or looks confUsed." In 2006,the National Science Foundation sponsore her to continue her work at the. MIT Media Lab. Industry groups regularly visit the lab and el Kaliouby’s research impressed them. “They asked , ^ Have you thought of using what you are working on to test a product?’ ” she recalls. So,in 2009 she and her MIT professor established Affectiva to do just that.
For a starting fee of $2,500,Affectiva makes its software available to marketers. Volunteers watch a video on a computer screen while the camera in the computer watches them back. Volunteers always know it is there and when they,re being recorded,which doesn’ t materially affect the results. Engagement,boredom,amusement,displeasure and more are tracked and analyzed. The database Affectiva uses to conduct those analyses is made up of more than 2. 5 million facial video samples. The software also takes factors such as sex,culture and age into account. “Women tend to smile more than men,” el Kaliouby says.
Market testing is only the lowest-hanging fruit. El Kaliouby expects to expand the business to political polling(民意測驗) and analysis,as well as helping teachers of online courses assess student engagement. She is still interested in autism and other psychological conditions. There are some potential growth areas that are more controversial: lie detection and airport security,for example. For Affectiva,they’ re no-go zones. “We believe volunteers should always have the right to decide whether to be tested,so for that reason we don't want to be in security ,” el Kaliouby says. That,of course,leaves that space open to new competitors.
28. When el Kaliouby founded Affectiva,she wanted to.
A. look for sponsors
B. help autistic children
C. create a video sample database
D. test commercials and TV pilots
29. What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A. The computer. B. The camera.
C. The screen. D. The video.
30. We can infer that “new competitors” mentioned in the last paragraph may use facial analysis to.
A. do political polling and analysis
B. assess online students’ engagement
C. examine whether people are telling lies
D. help people with psychological conditions
31. In which part of a magazine Can we read the text?
A. Technology. B. Education.
C. Lifestyle. D. Society.
(科普知識與現(xiàn)代技術(shù))
本文是說明文。Rana el Kaliouby創(chuàng)辦了Affectiva公司,通過分析受試者的面部表情判斷某一廣告或?qū)嶒炐怨?jié)自是否吸引現(xiàn)眾。
28. D.細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)前兩段中的...uses facial analysis to figure out if an advertisement or a TV pilot appeals to consumers,Affectiva ... is the most successful of these companies 及 “They asked ,‘Have you thought of using what you are working on to test a product?’”she recalls. So,in 2009 she and her MIT professor established Affectiva to do just that 可知,el Kaliouby 創(chuàng)辦 Affectiva公司就是要幫助客戶判斷某一廣告或 實驗性節(jié)目是否吸引觀眾。
29. B.篇章結(jié)構(gòu)題。根據(jù)劃線詞后的when the/re being recorded可推斷,這里指志愿者知道“攝像頭” It在那兒,也知道什么時候正在錄像。
30. C.推理判斷題。根據(jù)最后一段中的lie detection and airport security,for example. For Affectiva,they,re no-go zones 可知,Affectiva 公 司不會去做M謊和機ft安檢的業(yè)務(wù),這就為“新的 競爭者”留下空間,使得他們可以去做這些業(yè)務(wù)。
31. A.文章出處題。通讀全文可知,文章介紹了 Affectiva公司通過分析受試者的面部表情判斷 某一廣告或?qū)嶒炐怨?jié)目是否吸引觀眾。Affectiva公司分析面部表情的技術(shù)是本文的關(guān) 鍵,故本文最有可能出自科技版塊。
題目來源:2016年英語周報高三新課標 > 第59期 2015-2016高三課標
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
4 super-simple secrets to living longer,healthier and happier
Journalist Dan Buettner has spent over a decade studying the healthiest,longest-living people around the world,from residents of the Japanese island of Okinawa to the Greek island of Ikaria 一 so-called “Blue Zones”.
Now,he's letting the rest of us in on their secrets in his new book,The Blue Zones Solution: Eating and Living Like the World's Healthiest People. Here are the most important longevity-boosting habits of 100-year-olds around the globe. 36
1. Find your group
“Who you hang out with beats just about everything else when it comes to your health/' says Buettner. He found that the people who live longest surround themselves with people who support healthy behaviors. 37
2. Eat smart
The world's healthiest 100-year-olds stick with diets that are 95percent plant-based,says Buettner.38 British researchers tracked 65 ,000 people for 12 years and found that those who ate seven or more portions of vegetables and fruits every day lowered their risk of dying from cancer and cardiovascular (心腦血管的) disease by 25 percent and 31 percent.
3. Seek a purpose
Very old Blue Zoners share another quality: They have an activity,passion or career that motivates them and gives their lives meaning. Sense of purpose can come from a variety of sources,but volunteering is a common one. 39
4. Move it
40 What is unexpected: “They don't exercise,per se (本質(zhì)上) ,” says Buettner. “Instead,their lifestyles encourage physical activity.w They garden,bake bread and walk to the store or to work.
A. “They eat a little meat,but mostly fish,” he says.
B. They’ re still working,riding bikes,and enjoying life.
C. For some people,a sense of purpose comes naturally.
D. It's no surprise that physical activity also keeps Blue Zoners young.
E. One explanation: “Health habits can spread like an infectious disease."
F. Adopt even a few,and you’ 11 stand a better chance of living a long and healthy life.
G. There's growing evidence that it not only keeps people healthier but helps people live longer.
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
I'm walking around a street on Detroit's west side,looking at the house where my mother lived in the 1930s. A neighbor,understandably curious,bounds over.
“I'm the king of Glendale,M Keith Harris says. Harris loves Glendale Street — so much so that he’s purchased nine properties for $42,000. “I'm.not done yet,” he says. “I'm going to buy more and rent them." I'm glad to hear this. Glendale could use more investment. So could Tuxedo Street,a few blocks away,where my father grew up. So could Detroit.
I've seen all the photos showing Detroit in ruins. Now I've come to see for myself what's happened to what was America's fifth largest city around 1950. Then there were more than 1. 8 million residents(居民) ;now there are fewer than 700,000.
This is where my family settled after immigrating to the United States in the 1920s,moving into neighborhoods fiiled witi people just like them.
The handwritten 1940 census(人口 普查) page for Tuxedo Street literally illustrates the story: It shows a long list of Jewish names and the places from which Jews fled. The neighborhood was so insular (與世隔絕的) that when my American-bom mother went to kindergarten,she couldn't speak English.
Those families don't live here anymore. Some houses have become empty lots. But some are tidy symbols of survival and pride. Keith Harris owns one of those homes. We have clean-up-the-block day,” he tells me. aWe are trying to make it better.w
“Visitors like me walk these streets all the time,” he says, “Some people came and cried like babies." Maybe they shouldn't have. Though much is gone,there are seeds of hope across the city. Harris has planted some of those seeds. “We invest in this block,” he says, “because we want to stay."
21. Why does Keith Harris say he's the king of Glendale?
A. He invests heavily in Glendale.
B. He's a popular resident in Glendale.
C. He knows everything about Glendale.
D. He has the most attractive house in Glendale.
22. According to the text,Detroit .
A. has a splendid history
B. is able to bounce back
C. has few houses for rent
D. is attracting lots of visitors
23. What do we know about the author's mother?
A. She had no gift for language.
B. She lived in Tuxedo Street in the 1930s.
C. She immigrated into the US in the 1920s.
D. She had little access to other cultures as a kid.
24. Clean-up-the-block day was held to.
A. maintain its Jewish style
B. promote the image of Glendale
C. brighten up local residents’ life
D. set an example for the whole city
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
書面表達(滿分25分)
假定你是李華。你的美國朋友湯姆受邀去中國朋友家做客,發(fā)來郵件向你詢問中國的餐桌禮儀。 請你給他回一封郵件,要點包括:
1. 餐前:客人、長者先就坐并先動筷;
2. 餐中:共享食物,主人給客人夾菜;
3. 餐后:客人應(yīng)表達謝意。
注意:1. 詞數(shù)100左右;
2. 可以適當增加細節(jié),以使行文連貫; .
3. 開頭和結(jié)尾已給出,但不計入總詞數(shù)。
Dear Tom,
I’m very glad to hear from you.
I hope you will find ray information useful.
Yours,
Li Hua
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
Everybody in the world is seeking happiness 一 and there is one sure way 61. (find) it. That is by 62.(control) your thoughts. Happiness doesn't depend 63. outward conditions,but inner conditions.
It isn’t what you have or who you are or where you are or what you are doing 64.
makes you happy or unhappy. It is what you think about it. For example,two people may do 65. same thing in a place; both may have about an equal amount of money and status — and yet one may be 66. (depress) and the other happy. Why? Because they see things 67. (different) . I have seen just as many happy faces among the poor farmers 68. work very hard in the fields as I have seen in air-conditioned offices in New York,Chicago or Los Angeles.
Abraham Lincoln once 69. (say) that “most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be." He was right. If you decide to be happy,then you will always find plenty of 70. (reason) to be happy.
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
“Don’t talk to strangers ...” That is probably one of the 41 pieces of advice handed down from our parents. Yeah,they 42 well. Since there are bad people out there,it seems to be a good idea in order to help 43 us. And over the years we’ve learned how to keep our eyes 44 . We are used to making no eye contact with strangers.
45,the price that we pay for this 46 is that we grow up suspicious(表示懷疑的) of others and their motives. We tend to have a(n) 47 of strangers,which is neither necessary nor 48 as we grow older.
Most people out there are not sociopaths (反社會者) .49,most people are quite 50 . What once protected us from bad people is now preventing us from establishing relationships with 51 people!
In general,you know that the random stranger standing next to you is very 52 to kidnap (綁架) you,yet the emotion of fear is 53 associated with talking to them. So you 54 do it. But you miss out on a lot by closing yourself off to new people like this.
Instead,you should actively 55 that people in general are fiiendly. Why? Because they are. Most people actually are nice. We are 56 creatures,and we welcome interactions with others. Think about it: when a stranger starts a(n) 57 with you,how do you usually 58 ?
Besides,you never know who you might 59 . The person standing behind you in a line could one day be your best friend. It 60 . But even if it's not that extreme,you never know if that person has a job opportunity for you,or is just a cool person who you would enjoy having a brief conversation with.
41. A. shortest B. worst C. longest D. best
42. A. meant B. planned C. spoke D. worked
43. A. inspire B. instruct C. change D. protect
44. A. up B. open C. down D. shut
45. A. Especially B. Thankfully C. Unfortunately D. Uncertainly
46. A. safety B. health C. power D. delight
47. A. anger B. pain C. shame D. fear
48. A. important B. obvious C. humorous D. reasonable
49. A. In case B. In fact C. At times D. At first
50. A. brave B. friendly C. smart D. patient
51. A. bad B. famous C. good D. common
52. A. ready B. unlikely C. eager D. unwilling
53. A. still B. never C. only D. even
54. A. always B. often C. sometimes D. seldom
55. A. doubt B. assume C. guess D. decide
56. A. living B. complex C. unique D. social
57. A. meeting B. experiment C. argument D. conversation
58. A. listen B. connect C. react D. devote
59. A. hurt B. forget C. meet D. benefit
60. A. happens B. depends C. affects D. fails
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
14. These monkeys are such quick thieves that they your bananas when you realise what has happened.
A. will enjoy B. are enjoying
C. have been enjoying D. will be enjoying
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
11. “Tommy,run!The house is on Hre!” mother shouted with clearly in her voice.
A. anger B. rudeness
C. pain D. panic
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
短文改錯(共10小題;每小題1分,滿分10分)
假定英語課上老師要求同桌之間交換修改作文,請你修改你同桌寫的以下作文。文中共有10處語言錯誤,每句中最多有兩處。每處錯誤僅涉及一個單詞的增加、刪除或修改。
增加:在缺詞處加一個漏字符號(∧) ,并在其下面寫出該加的詞。
刪除:把多余的詞用斜線(\) 劃掉。
注意:1. 每處錯誤及其修改均僅限一詞;
2. 只允許修改10處,多者(從第11處起) 不計分。
I'm the type of person who like to have one or two good friend rather than lots of acquaintances. Well,when my family moves away from our hometown,I really needed to make some new friends. Because I'm very much shy,I thought I should change my personality to become most outgoing. But that was very difficulty for me. I began to regret leave my hometown. Then,all of sudden,I got a call from my old friend. His family would move here pretty soon. Since then,they have always spent some time together and under his help,I’ve made a lot of new friends.
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