问题 选择题

近日,“中国式过马路”在网上引起热议,是对部分中国人集体闯红灯现象的一种调侃,即“凑够一撮人就可以走了,和红绿灯无关。”过马路像过景阳冈一般“凑二三十人即可过冈”。调侃之余,我们也不禁引起深思:“中国式过马路”普遍反映了人们漠视交通规则的问题。 有专家认为,要破解“中国式过马路”不仅是一道社会管理题,还是一道公民文明素质题。这种说法坚持了

①普遍联系的观点              ②形而上学的观点

③辩证否定的观点              ④对立统一的观点

A.①②

B.①④

C.②③

D.①③

答案

答案:B

题目分析:要破解“中国式过马路”,不仅要提高公民文明素质,还要加强社会管理,这坚持了联系的观点,①正确;同时坚持了全面的观点,坚持了对立统一的观点,④符合题意。本题选B。材料未体现辩证否定的观点,③错误;②是一种错误的思维方式,不选。

多项选择题 案例分析题
单项选择题

Feeling anxious Your mood may actually change how your dinner tastes, making the bitter and salty flavors recede, according to new research. This link between the chemical balance in your brain and your sense of taste could one day help doctors to treat depression. There are currently no on-the-spot tests for deciding which medication will work best in individual patients with this condition. Researchers hope that a test based on flavor detection could help doctors to get more prescriptions right first time.

It has long been known that people who are depressed have lower-than-usual levels of the brain chemicals serotonin or noradrenaline, or in some cases both. Many also have a blunted sense of taste, which is presumably caused by changes in brain chemistry. To unpick the relationship between the two, Lucy Donaldson and her colleagues at the University of Bristol, UK, gave 20 healthy volunteers two antidepressant drugs, and checked their sensitivity to different tastes. The drug that raised serotonin levels made people more sensitive to sweet and bitter tastes, the team reports in the Journal of Neuroscience. The other, which increased noradrenaline, enhanced recognition of bitter and sour tastes.

In healthy people, volunteers whose anxiety levels were naturally higher were less sensitive to bitter and salty tastes. "What hasn’t been done beore is to look precisely at which tastes are affected in depression," says Donaldson. Now the results are in, "we can discriminate between the chemicals and the tastes that seem to be altered," she says. Testing sensitivity to sweet and sour tastes could potentially help doctors to pick up on which chemicals are dipping, guiding them when choosing which drug to rectify the problem.

Currently, doctors rely on physical and emotional symptoms to make a best guess at an individual’s imbalance, prescribe a drug and wait about a month to check on any improvement. Good doctors have about a 60-80% success rate in selecting the right drug the first time, says psychiatrist Jan Melichar, a co-author on the paper. Are there any decent tests for prescribing drugs for depression "No. We do a best guesstimate," says Melichar. "I’m excited by this finding because in 3, 5 or 7 years we could have a simple taste test. "

Next, the team plans to perform similar tests in depressed people, and in healthy volunteers given another brain chemical called tryptophan. This chemical would lower the healthy subjects’ levels of serotonin, as actually happens in depressed patients.

The work has also generated interest from flavor houses--companies that develop chemicals for the food and drink industry--who are interested in making foods taste just as sweet with half the amount of sugar. "Theoretically there would be the possibility of enhancing your meal with drugs that affect brain chemicals so that things would taste better--you couid have a ’designer taste tablet’," Donaldson says.

Which of the following is TRUE as to the results of the research()

A. Increased serotonin weakens sensitivity to the tastes of bitter and sour

B. The more anxious people are, the more sensitive to sour taste

C. The tryptophan can add healthy people’s serotonin amount

D. The tryptophan can lower healthy people’s serotonin level