New research shows that overweight or even mildly obese people have a lower risk of early death than people considered to be normal weight.
Researchers examined the results of 97 studies. Most of the studies were less than 10 years old. They included almost three million adults from around the world, including the United States, Canada, China, Taiwan, Brazil, India and Mexico.
The researchers at the National Center for Health Statistics found that people who are considered overweight or slightly obese were five to six percent less likely to die from all causes than people of normal weight. People with higher obesity ratings, however, had almost a 30 percent greater risk of death compared to normal-weight individuals.
Katherine Flegal was the lead author of the study. She says she was not surprised that overweight people would not have a higher risk of death.
“Because we’d actually already read a lot of this literature and realized it was likely that mortality rates (死亡率) for overweight would be at least not higher than normal weight. I guess I was a little bit surprised that it was definitely lower. And I was also surprised that the lower rates of obesity also didn’t seem to differ from normal weight.”
But she says the difference in death rates appears to be small between normal-weight people and those who are overweight or mildly obese.
The study has raised new questions about “body mass index,”(體重指數(shù)) or BMI. This is a measurement of body fat as a ratio(比率) of height to weight. In recent years, many public health experts have promoted body mass index as a way to predict the risk of health problems. Bu t a person's BMI can be misleading in some cases.
Steven Heymsfield ,the executive director of the Pennington Biomedical Research Center, says people can be physically fit and in good health, but might weigh more because they are more muscular.
Still, Dr. Heymsfield says people should not think gaining extra weight is OK just because of the new findings. He says being at a healthy weight lowers the risk for heart disease and diabetes(糖尿。.
【小題1】According to the new findings, the researchers found that __________ .
A.People with high obesity have a lower risk of early death than people with low obesity |
B.People with overweight have a greater risk of early death than people of normal weight. |
C.People with mild obesity are less likely to die than people of normal weight. |
D.People with obesity live much longer than people of normal weight. |
A.works like novels and poems |
B.books and articles on a particular subject |
C.printed material |
D.magazines and newspapers |
A.BMI is commonly used to measure body fat as a ratio of height to weight. |
B.Not all people with a little higher BMI are fat . |
C.Many public health experts encourage more people to use BMI as a way to predict the risk of health problem |
D.Because of the ne w findings, people should think about gaining extra weight. |
【小題1】C
【小題2】B
【小題3】D
解析試題分析:一項(xiàng)新的研究表明,體重超標(biāo)甚至是輕微肥胖的人比被認(rèn)為體重正常的人早死的幾率要小。研究人員還提出了新的“體重指數(shù)”,但是同時(shí)也指出不能僅靠“體重指數(shù)”來衡量一個(gè)人是否健康,也不能因?yàn)轶w重稍微重的人早死幾率低就去增肥。
【小題1】C細(xì)節(jié)理解題。從文章開頭New research shows that overweight or even mildly obese people have a lower risk of early death than people considered to be normal weight.可知C項(xiàng)正確。
【小題2】B詞意猜測題,前句講“人們實(shí)際上已經(jīng)讀過很多這樣的。!薄6恼聝(nèi)容是講述的是一份調(diào)查研究的內(nèi)容,由此可以推斷l(xiāng)iterature詞意應(yīng)該和research或study等有關(guān)。所以B選項(xiàng)正確。
【小題3】D細(xì)節(jié)理解題。從文章最后一段Dr. Heymsfield says people should not think gaining extra weight is OK just because of the new findings.可知D選項(xiàng)內(nèi)容錯(cuò)誤。
考點(diǎn):考查社會(huì)科學(xué)類短文閱讀。
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The next time your face turns red after tripping(絆倒) over your own feet in public, don’t try to hide it—a new study finds that showing your embarrassment actually makes other people view you as more reliable.
Researchers at the University of California have carried out the study and found that embarrassment is a good signature of a person to whom you can entrust valuable resources.
Not only are the findings useful for people seeking cooperative and reliable team members and business partners, but they also make for helpful dating advice.“Moderate(適度的) levels of embarrassment are signs of virtue. Our data suggests embarrassment is a good thing, not something you should fight.”said Matthew Feinberg, who led the study.
While the most typical gesture of embarrassment is a downward gaze to one side while partly covering the face, a person who feels shame, as distinguished(區(qū)別) from embarrassment, will typically cover the whole face, Feinberg said.
The results were got from a series of experiments. In the first experiment, 60 college students were videotaped describing embarrassing moments, such as making incorrect assumptions(假想) based on appearances. The college students also participated in the “Dictator Game” which is used in economics research to measure altruism(利己主義). For example, each was given 10 raffle tickets(獎(jiǎng)券) and asked to keep a share of the tickets and give the reminder(提示物) to a partner.
The findings, published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, showed that those who showed greater levels of embarrassment tended to give away more of their raffle tickets, indicating(﹦showing) greater generosity.
【小題1】According to the passage, which of the following is thought to be reliable?
A.A person who feels shame. |
B.A person who hides his embarrassment. |
C.A person who shows his embarrassment. |
D.A person who gives away more raffle tickets. |
A.it’s useless to fight our embarrassment |
B.people should try to overcome their embarrassment |
C.embarrassed people are not good at doing business |
D.people who show embarrassment can be good business partners |
A.measure the students’ economic status |
B.test whether a student is generous or not |
C.determine the different levels of embarrassment |
D.record how each student reacts during embarrassing moments |
A.proved to be more generous | B.kept more of the raffle tickets |
C.didn’t care for raffle tickets | D.were less reliable |
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John Marrit, a psychologist(心理學(xué)家) in Williamsburg Massachusetts, helped develop the new machine. This is how they work. A machine is placed in an area far away from the person who operates it. The person wears special hard hat with television screens and sound equipment. The screens and sound equipment let the person see and hear exactly what the machine is seeing and hearing. Mr. Marrit says this gives the person the feeling of being in the same place as the machine. The idea, he says, is being there without going there. The person uses an electronic control to make the machine move. The machine copies the person’s movements exactly. If the person raises his right arm, the machine raises the right arm, too. This means an expert can do a dangerous job while staying in the safe place. For example, a person can direct the machine to destroy a bomb without going near the bomb himself.
【小題1】The new kind of machine being introduced in the passage is _______.
A.in existence | B.only an idea |
C.being tried out | D.being researched and developed |
A.follows the person’s order |
B.is controlled by a computer |
C.does exactly what the person does |
D.is controlled by a television on the person’s head |
A.the new machine is more difficult to make than a robot |
B.the new machine is more difficult to be controlled |
C.a(chǎn) robot is controlled by man indirectly |
D.a(chǎn) robot can’t be used in places too dangerous or faraway |
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After China’s first satellite into the Earth’s orbit in 1970 came four flights of unmanned Shenzhou missions(飛行) from 1999 to 2002. The country carried out its first one-piloted space flight in October, 2003, making China the third country in the world to have independent human spaceflight ability after the Soviet Union and the United States. Then came another breakthrough on October 12, 2005, when Shenzhou 6, China’s second human spaceflight, was launched, with a crew of two astronauts. What’s more, the landmark spacewalk done by Zhai Zhigang, one of the three boarding Shenzhou 7, launched on Sept. 25, 2008, leads the country further in its space exploration.
Meanwhile, China’s moon exploration project, started in 2004, has also been progressing satisfactorily. Fifty years after the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, the world’s first man-made satellite, China’s first circumlunar(繞月的)satellite Chang’e 1 took off on Oct.24, 2007, which became another milestone(里程碑) in China’s space achievements after the above-mentioned manned flights. Chang’e 1 was expected to fulfill four scientific goals, one of which was to probe(勘探)mineral elements on the moon, especially those not existent on Earth. It’s said that the lunar regolith(月壤) is abundant in helium-3, a clean fuel that may support the Earth’s energy demands for more than a century. Nearly 3 years later, Oct. 1, 2010 witnessed the blasting off of Chang’e 2, China’s 2nd unmanned lunar probe, marking another step forward in moon exploration. This time the aim is to test the key techniques of Chang’e 3 and Chang’e 4, as a preparation for a soft lunar landing in the future.
With great expectations, people all over the world are looking forward to China’s greater space achievements.
【小題1】Altogether how many astronauts have made successful spaceflight by Shenzhou spaceship by now?
A.4 | B.5 | C.6 | D.7 |
A.China sent its first satellite into the Moon’s orbit in 1970. |
B.China is the third country in Asia to make human spaceflight. |
C.China has blasted off 4 unmanned lunar probes. |
D.The launching of Chang’e 1 became the third milestone in China’s space achievements. |
A.China’s road to outer space has not been very smooth for a long time |
B.the lunar regolith is believed to be rich in a clean fuel called helium-3 |
C.China’s lunar exploration project was started in 2004 and completed in 2007 |
D.China’s scientists are researching into techniques for soft lunar landing |
A.Ancient Chinese’s Dream | B.China’s Major Space Achievements |
C.China’s Moon Exploration | D.The World’s Great Expectations |
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Winter begins in the north on December 22nd. People and animals have been doing what they always do to prepare for the colder months. Squirrels (松鼠), for example, have been busy gathering nuts from trees. Well, scientists have been busy gathering information about what the squirrels do with the food they collect.
They examined differences between red squirrels and gray squirrels in the American state of Indiana. The scientists wanted to know how these differences could affect the growth of black walnut (黑胡桃) trees. The black walnut is the nut of choice for both kinds of squirrels. The black walnut tree is also a central part of some hardwood forests.
Rob Swihart of Purdue University did the study with Jake Goheen, a former Purdue student now at the University of New Mexico. The two researchers estimate that several times as many walnuts grow when gathered by gray squirrels as compared to red squirrels. Gray squirrels and red squirrels do not store nuts and seeds in the same way. Gray squirrels bury nuts one at a time in a number of places. But they seldom remember where they buried every nut. So some nuts remain in the ground. Conditions are right for them to develop and grow the following spring. Red squirrels, however, store large groups of nuts above ground. Professor Swihart calls “death traps for seeds”.
Gray squirrels are native to Indiana. But Professor Swihart says their numbers began to decrease as more forests were cut for agriculture. Red squirrels began to spread through the state during the past century.
The researchers say red squirrels are native to forests that stay green all year, unlike walnut trees. They say the cleaning of forest land for agriculture has helped red squirrels invade Indiana. Jake Goheen calls them a sign of an environmental problem more than a cause.
【小題1】The study done by Rob Swihart and Jake Goheen is to ________.
A.find out the living conditions for squirrels |
B.learn squirrels’ influence on black walnut trees |
C.do something to get rid of squirrels |
D.save the forests in the American state of Indiana |
A.the way they gather the walnut |
B.the time they have winter sleep |
C.the place they have winter sleep |
D.the place they store the walnuts |
A.red squirrels eat more nuts than gray squirrels |
B.gray squirrels and red squirrels will have severe fights |
C.nuts above the ground will not develop into plants |
D.seeds can be traps for other animals in the forest |
A.The black walnut is equally attractive to both gray and red squirrels. |
B.Gray squirrels do more harm to the forest than red squirrels. |
C.Red squirrels and gray squirrels have helped the spread of walnut trees. |
D.The cleaning of forest land benefits red squirrels directly. |
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Almost every machine with moving parts has wheels, yet no one knows exactly when the first wheel was invented or what it was used for. We do know, however, that they existed over 5,500 years ago in ancient Asia.
The oldest known transport wheel was discovered in Slovenia. It is over 5,100 years old. Evidence suggests that wheels for transport didn’t become popular for a while, though. This could be because animals did a perfectly good job of carrying farming tools and humans around. But it could also be because of a difficult situation. While wheels need to roll on smooth surfaces, roads with smooth surfaces weren’t going to be constructed until there was plenty of demand for them. Eventually, road surfaces did become smoother, but this difficult situation appeared again a few centuries later. There had been no important changes in wheel and vehicle design before the arrival of modern road design.
In the mid-1700s, a Frenchman came up with a new design of road — a base layer (層) of large stones covered with a thin layer of smaller stones. A Scotsman improved on this design in the 1820s and a strong, lasting road surface became a reality. At around the same time, metal hubs (the central part of a wheel) came into being, followed by the pneumatic type (充氣輪胎) in 1846.Alloy wheels were invented in 1967, sixty years after the appearance of tarmacked roads (柏油路). As wheel design took off, vehicles got faster and faster.
【小題1】What might explain why transport wheels didn’t become popular for some time?
A.Few knew how to use transport wheels. |
B.Humans carried farming tools just as well. |
C.Animals were a good means of transport. |
D.The existence of transport wheels was not known. |
A.It was easier than wheel design. |
B.It improved after big changes in vehicle design. |
C.It was promoted by fast-moving vehicles. |
D.It provided conditions for wheel design to develop. |
A.By giving examples. | B.By making comparisons. |
C.By following time order. | D.By making classifications. |
A.The beginning of road design. |
B.The development of transport wheels. |
C.The history of public transport |
D.The invention of fast-moving vehicles. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Most animals have little connection with animals of a different kind, unless they hunt them for food. Sometimes, however, two kinds of animals come together in a partnership(伙伴關(guān)系) which does good to both of them. You may have noticed some birds sitting on the back of sheep. This is not because they want a ride, but because they find easy food in the parasites(寄生蟲)on sheep. The sheep allow the birds to do so because they remove the cause of discomfort. So although they can manage without each other, they do better together.
Sometimes an animal has a plant partner. The relationship develops until the two partners cannot do without each other. This is so in the corals(珊瑚)of the sea. In their skins they have tiny plants which act as “dustman”, taking some of the waste products from the coral and giving in return oxygen which the animal needs to breathe. If the plants are killed, or are even prevented from light so that they cannot live normally, the corals will die.
【小題1】Some birds like to sit on a sheep because _________.
A.they can eat its parasites |
B.they consider the sheep as their shelter |
C.they enjoy traveling with the sheep |
D.they find the position most comfortable |
A.birds and parasites | B.sheep, birds and parasites |
C.parasites and sheep | D.birds and sheep |
A.comfort | B.light | C.oxygen | D.food |
A.Some plants depend on each other for food. |
B.Some animals and plants develop their relationship easily. |
C.Some animals and plants depend on each other for existence. |
D.Some animals live better together. |
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In July 1994 Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, was struck by 21 pieces of a comet (彗星). When the fragments (碎片) landed in the southern part of the giant planet, the explosions(爆炸) were watched by scientists here on the earth. But what if our own planet was hit by a comet?
The year is 2094. It has been announced that a comet is heading towards the Earth. Most of it will miss our planet, but two fragments will probably hit the southern part of the Earth. The news has caused panic.
On 17 July, a fragment, four kilometers wide, enters the Earth's atmosphere with a huge explosion. About half of the fragment is destroyed. But the major part survives and hits the South Atlantic at 200 times the speed of sound. The sea boils and an enormous(巨大的) wave is created and spreads. The wall of water rushes towards southern Africa at 800 kilometres an hour. Cities on the African coast are totally destroyed and millions of people are drowned. The wave moves into the Indian Ocean and heads towards Asia.
Millions of people are already dead in the southern part of the Earth, but the north won't escape for long. Tons of broken pieces are thrown into the atmosphere by the explosions. As the sun is hidden by clouds of dust, temperatures around the world fall to almost zero. Crops are ruined. Wars break out as countries fight for food. A year later civilization has collapsed(崩潰). No more than 10 million people have survived.
Could it really happen? In fact, it has already happened more than once in the history of the Earth. The dinosaurs were on the Earth for over 160 million years. Then 65 million years ago they suddenly disappeared. Many scientists believe that the Earth was hit by a space fragment. The dinosaurs couldn't survive in the cold climate that followed and they became extinct. Will we meet the same end?
【小題1】Which of the following is NOT TRUE according to the author's description of the disaster in 2094?
A.The whole world becomes extremely cold |
B.All the coastal cities in Africa are destroyed |
C.The visit of the comet results in wars |
D.The whole mankind becomes extinct |
A.Because they could only live in the warm climate |
B.Because their extinction indicates future disasters |
C.Because they once dominated(控制) the earth |
D.Because dinosaurs and humans never live in the same age |
A.give an accurate description of the possible disaster in the future |
B.prove that humans will sooner or later be destroyed |
C.warn of a possible disaster in the future |
D.tell the historical development of the Earth |
A.a(chǎn)rticle of popular science | B.news report |
C.research paper | D.horror story |
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