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The experiments show that high-fat diets 查看材料A.the

The experiments show that high-fat diets 查看材料

A.the volunteers do

B.because she does not have a weight problem

C.because the life there can be very boring

D.make people overeat

E.because she was her own boss

F.after passing a high-protein test

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更多“The experiments show that high…”相关的问题
第1题
Experiments show that monkeys have language.A.YB.NC.NG

Experiments show that monkeys have language.

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第2题
Scientists have done countless experiments to show that praise is far ______ (effective) than critic

Scientists have done countless experiments to show that praise is far ______ (effective) than criticism in improving human behavior.

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第3题
Explain why nuclear magnetic resonance experiments show only one type of hydrogen atom in the ion.

Explain why nuclear magnetic resonance experiments show only one type of hydrogen atom in theExplain why nuclear magnetic resonance experimentsion.

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第4题
What do experiments show about our memories?A.We are more likely to remember things we do

What do experiments show about our memories?

A.We are more likely to remember things we do than things we see.

B.People always remember pleasant things rather than unpleasant ones.

C.Our ability to remember something depends on our feelings when it happens.

D.We tend to have better long-term memories than short-term memories.

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第5题
The purpose of George Spilich’s experiments is ________.A) to test whether smoking

The purpose of George Spilich’s experiments is ________.

A) to test whether smoking has a positive effect on the mental capacity of smokers

B) to show how smoking damages people’s mental capacity

C) to prove that smoking affects people’s regular performance

D) to find out whether smoking helps people’s short-term memory

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第6题
What can you infer from the passage? 查看材料A.The expe

What can you infer from the passage? 查看材料

A.The experiments show that salt ingestion does not necessarily cause animals to develop hypertension bypretension with the environmental factors being equal.

B.Dietary salt is harmful to human being"s health.

C.Human beings" high blood pressure will never be easily put under control.

D.In order not to develop hypertension, man should consume chemically pure salt.

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第7题
选词填空:Let’s all stop judging people who talk to themselves. New research says that
those who can’t seem to keep their inner monologues (独白) in are actually more likely to stay on task, remain 26 better and show improved perception capabilities. Not bad, really, for some extra muttering.

According to a series of experiments published in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology by professors Gary Lupyan and Daniel Swignley, the act of using verbal clues to 27 mental pictures helps people function quicker.

In one experiment, they showed pictures of various objects to twenty 28 and asked them to find just one of those, a banana. Half were 29 to repeat out loud what they were looking for and the other half kept their lips 30 . Those who talked to themselves found the banana slightly faster than those who didn’t, the researchers say. In other experiments, Lupyan and Swignley found that 31 the name of a common product when on the hunt for it helped quicken someone’s pace, but talking about uncommon items showed no advantage and slowed you down.

Common research has long held that talking themselves through a task helps children learn, although doing so when you’ve 32 matured is not a great sign of 33 . The two professors hope to refute that idea, 34 that just as when kids walk themselves through a process, adults can benefit from using language not just to communicate, but also to help “augment thinking”.

Of course, you are still encouraged to keep the talking at library tones and, whatever you do, keep the information you share simple, like a grocery list. At any 35 , there’s still such a thing as too much information.

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第8题
The first moving-picture theater was probably the work of Harry Davis, Pittsburgh's most p
rosperous showman. In 1904, he rented a storefront, filled the room with chairs, gaily decorated the exterior, and advertised the【C1】______of a "nickelodeon". It was a(n)【C2】______success.

Although Davis was the first one to use the name nickelodeon,【C3】______experiments were taking place in other parts of the country.【C4】______the country vaudeville(杂耍)managers, traveling exhibitors, and show businessmen【C5】______their jobs to set up their own nickel picture【C6】______. There was a great deal of money【C7】______in the business, but nickelodeon owners had to work hard to【C8】______their product. They could not afford to advertise【C9】______in the papers, but they could and【C10】______design their storefront facades to call attention to their shows — with oversized【C11】______, attraction boards, posters, and as many light bulbs as they had【C12】______for. To draw the attention of【C13】______, they set up photographs on the street side and hired【C14】______barkers: "It is only five cents. See the moving-picture show, see the wonders of Port Said tonight, and a shrieking comedy from real life,【C15】______for five cents. Step in this way and learn to laugh."

From our vantage(有利的)point in the 1990s — distracted【C16】______we are by television, radio, CD players and DVDs, it's difficult to recapture the【C17】______caused by the appearance of these first nickel theaters. For the【C18】______of the city's population, until now shut out of its theaters and commercial amusements, the sudden【C19】______of nickel shows within walking distance must have been【C20】______short of extraordinary.

【C1】

A.beginning

B.opening

C.operation

D.promotion

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第9题
请根据短文的内容,回答题。 Principles of Governing PersuasionIf leadership consists of gett

请根据短文的内容,回答题。

Principles of Governing Persuasion

If leadership consists of getting thing done through others, then persuasion is one of the leader&39;s essential tools. Many executives have assumed that this tool is beyond their grasp, available only to the charismatic (有魅力的) and the eloquent. Over the past several decades, though, experimental psychologists have learned which methods reliably lead people to concede, comply, or change. Their research shows that persuasion is governed by several principles that can be taught and applied.<br>

The first principle is that people are more likely to follow someone who is similar to them than someone who is not. Wise managers, then, ask peers to help make their cases. Second, people are more willing to cooperate with those who are not only like them but who like them, as well. So it&39;s worth the time to uncover real similarities and offer genuine praise.<br>

Third, experiments confirm the intuitive truth that people tend to treat you the way you treat them. It&39;s sound policy to do a favor before seeking one. Fourth, individuals are more likely to keep promises they make voluntarily and clearly. The message for managers here is to get commitments in writing. Fifth, studies show that people really do defer to (服从) experts. So before they attempt to exert influence, executives should take pains to establish their own expertise and not assume that it&39;s self-evident. Finally, people want more of a commodity when it&39;s scarce; it follows, then, that exclusive information is more persuasive than widely available data.

Experiments have confirmed the assumption of many executives. 查看材料

A.right

B.Wrong

C.Not mentioned

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第10题
Once we learn the rules for map reading, they seem so simple: up is north, blue is water,
a star stands for a capital. But when and how do we learn to read a map? Research shows that even three-year-olds can master, at least in a basic way, the key map-reading concept(概念): a map is a two-dimensional symbol(二维的符号)for three-dimensional space. Linda Acredolo of the University of California, showed a child a map of a room pointed out on it where a toy was hidden and asked the child to find that toy. Depending on the maps orientation(方位), about half the three-year-olds could successfully do so. Three years may be the age at which the ideas become fully understood. Judy Deloache of the University of Illinois let children watch her hide a small toy in a scale model of a room and asked them to find a large one in a real room. "A three-year-olds can do it, but a two-year-olds has no idea that the model has to do with anything larger, " she says. But even if the basic concept is there early, Lynn Liben and Roger Downs of Pennsylvania State University found that children still have a lot to learn. Second graders believe that north is always at the top of a map because of the hanging maps they have seen. "If you asked them to close their eyes and point in the direction of north, often theyll point straight up," says Lihen. She says that children get map-reading skills gradually, and teachers must begin by using maps of familiar areas: their own classrooms, homes, and neighbourhoods.

The first two experiments show that______.

A.children have better understanding than grown-ups

B.children have special natural ability for map reading

C.children are more interested in toys than in maps

D.children can start to learn map-reading early

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