问题 阅读理解

阅读理解。    

     People from East Asia tend to have more difficulty than those from Europe in distinguishing facial

expressions - and a new report published online in Current Biology explains why .

     Rachael Jack , University of Glasgow researcher , said that rather than scanning evenly(均匀的)

across a face as Westerners do , Easterners fix their attention on the eyes .

     " We show that Easterners and Westerners look at different face features to read facial expressions ,

" Jack said . " Westerners look at the eyes and the mouth in equal measure , while Easterners favor the

eyes and neglect (忽略) the mouth ."

     According to Jack and her colleagues , the discovery shows that human communication of emotion is

more complex than previously believed . As a result , facial expressions that had been considered

universally recognizable cannot be used to reliably convey emotion in cross-cultural situations .

     The researchers studied cultural differences in the recognition of facial expressions by recording the

eye movements of 13 Western Caucasian and 13 East Asian people while they observed pictures of

expressive faces and put them into categories : happy , sad , surprised , fearful , disgusted , angry , or

neutral . They compared how accurately participants read those facial expressions using their particular

eye movement strategies .

     It turned out that Easterners focused much greater attention on the eyes and made significantly more

errors than Westerners did . " The cultural difference in eye movements that they show is probably a

reflection of cultural difference in facial expressions , " Jack said . " Our data suggest that whereas

Westerners use the whole face to convey emotion , Easterners use the eyes more and mouth less ."

     In short , the data show that facial expressions are not universal signals of human emotion . From here

on , examining how cultural factors have diversified these basic social skills will help our understanding of

human emotion . Otherwise , when it comes to communicating emotions across cultures , Easterners and Westerners will find themselves lost in translation .

1. The discovery shows that Westerners        .

A. pay equal attention to the eyes and the mouth

B. consider facial expressions universally reliable

C. observe the eyes and the mouth in different ways

D. have more difficulty in recognizing facial expressions

2. What were the people asked to do in the study ?

A. To make a face at each other            

B. To get their faces impressive

C. To classify some face pictures          

D. To observe the researchers' faces

3. What does the underlined word " they " in Paragraph 6 refer to ?

A. The participants in the study

B. The researchers of the study

C. The errors made during the study

D. The data collected from the study

4. In comparison with Westerners , Easterners are likely to      .

A. do translation more successfully

B. study the mouth more frequently

C. examine the eyes more attentively

D. read facial expressions more correctly

5. What can be the best title for the passage ?

A. The Eye as the Window to the Soul

B. Cultural Differences in Reading Emotions

C. Effective Methods to Develop Social Skills

D. How to Increase Cross-cultural Understanding

答案

1-5: ACACB

填空题

Part 4


Questions 26-45


·Read the following text and decide which answer best fits each space.
·For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, C or D on the Answer Sheet.

Speaking Her Hind


By the time they turn 55, most Hollywood actresses see their careers start to fade. Not (26) for Susan Sarandon, who will help kick offthe fall movie season with three films.
(27) of the movies are likely to be blockbusters, but Sarandon chooses her (28) more for the stories they tell (29) for their commercial potential. "If we’re very lucky, these films will (30) questions that people will talk about," she says.
She’s done her own share of questioning, and arrived at a place in life (31) she’s not afraid to stand (32) her convictions—and then follow (33) with action. The eldest of nine children in a New Jersey Roman Catholic family, she stumbled into an acting (34) when she attended an audition with her ex-husband, Chris Sarandon. Twenty-five years and five Oscar nominations later, she (35) a Best Actress Academy Award for her role as Sister Helen Prejean in 1995’s Dead Man Waling, a searing film about capital punishment.
By (36) Sarandon was practiced at using her celebrity to (37) causes close to her heart. (38) , while presenting an award at the 1993 Oscars, she and longtime partner Tim Robbins, an actor and director, took 30 seconds of their podium time to speak on (39) of Haitian refugees with AIDS. "At the (40) of acting and activism is imagination," Sarandon says. "I’ve (41) had the ability to imagine being in someone else’s shoes."
She is a supporter of end-hunger and poverty (42) including Heifer International, Madre, and Habitat for Humanity, as (43) as the Center for Constitutional Rights. In the aftermath of September 11, she cooked for workers at Ground Zero, did benefit performances, and befriended firefighters and victims’ families.
Sarandon is (44) hands-on in the role she calls her (45) important—mother of three children.

A.For instance

B.Since then

C.Nevertheless

D.Otherwise

单项选择题