问题 单项选择题 A1/A2型题

羊水过少的诊断是指在妊娠晚期羊水量少于()

A.200ml

B.300ml

C.600ml

D.900ml

E.1200ml

答案

参考答案:B

阅读理解与欣赏

尊重

       这是发生在美国纽约曼哈顿的一个真实故事。

       一天,一个四十多岁的中年女人领着一个小男孩走进美国著名企业“巨象集团”总部大厦楼下的花园。在一张长椅上坐了下来。她不停地在跟男孩说着什么,似乎很生气的样子,不远处有一位头发花白的老人正在修剪花木。

       忽然,中年女人从随身的挎包里揪出一团白花花的卫生纸,一甩手将它抛到老人刚剪过的花木上。老人诧异地转过头朝中年女人看了一眼,中年女人也满不在平地看着他。老人什么也没有说,走过去拿起那团纸扔进一旁装垃圾的筐子里。

       过了一会儿,中年女人又揪出一团卫生纸扔了过来。老人再次走过去把那团纸拾起来扔进筐子里,然后回到原处继续工作。可是老人刚拿起剪刀,第三团卫生纸又落到他眼前的灌木上……就这样,老人一连捡了那中年女人扔的六七团纸,但他始终也没有因此露出不满和厌烦的神色。

      “你看见了吧!”中年女人指了指修剪花木的老人对男孩说,“我希望你明白,你如果现在不好好学习,将来就跟他一样没有出息,只能做这些卑微的工作!”

       老人放下剪刀走过来,对中年女人说:“夫人,这里是‘巨象集团’的私家花园,按规定只有集团的员工才可以进来。”

      “那当然,我是‘巨象集团’所属一家公司的部门经理,就在这座大厦工作!”中年女人高傲地说,同时掏出一张证件朝老人晃了晃。

      “我能借你的手机用一下吗?”老人很有礼貌地说。

       中年女人很不情愿地把手机递给老人,同时又不失时机地开导儿子:“你看这些穷人,这么大年纪了连部手机也买不起。你今后一定要努力呀!”

       老人打完电话后把手机还给中年女人,很快一名男子匆匆走来,恭恭敬敬地站在老人面前。老人对来人说:“我现在提议免去这位女士在‘巨象集团’的职务!”“是,我立刻按您的指示去办!”来人连声答道。

       老人吩咐完后径直朝小男孩走去,他用手抚了抚男孩的头,意味深长地说:“我希望你明白,在这世界上最重要的是要学会尊重每一个人!”说完,老人撇下三人缓缓而去。

       中年女人被眼前骤然发生的事情惊呆了。她认识那名男子,他是“巨象集团”主管任免各级员工的一位高级职员。“你……你怎么会对这个老园工那么尊重呢?”她大惑不解地问。

      “你说什么?老园工?他是‘巨象集团’总裁詹姆斯先生!”

       中年女人一下子瘫坐在长椅上。她望着那位老人渐渐远去的背影,好久好久都没有回过神来……

1.给下列词语中划线的字注音。

     (      )异     (      )下

2.“她不停地在跟男孩说着什么,似乎很生气的样子”根据全文内容,想想一下这位中年女人会对男孩说些什么?

   ___________________________________________________________________________________

3.詹姆斯先生为什么要免去中年女人在“巨象集团”的职务?

   ___________________________________________________________________________________

4.为什么中年女人“望着那位老人渐渐远去的背影,好久好久都没有回过神来”。

   ___________________________________________________________________________________

5.通过这篇文章,你对“巨象集团”总裁詹姆斯先生有哪些了解?

   ___________________________________________________________________________________

   ___________________________________________________________________________________

单项选择题

Addiction is such a harmful behavior, in fact, that evolution should have long ago weeded it out of the population: if it’s hard to drive safely under the influence, imagine trying to run from a saber-toothed tiger or catch a squirrel for lunch. And yet, says Dr. Nora Volkow, director of NIDA and a pioneer in the use of imaging to understand addiction, "the use of drugs has been recorded since the beginning of civilization. Humans in my view will always want to experiment with things to make them feel good. "

That’s because drugs of abuse co-opt the very brain functions that allowed our distant ancestors to survive in a hostile world. Our minds are programmed to pay extra attention to what neurologists call salience--that is, special relevance. Threats, for example, are highly salient, which is why we instinctively try to get away from them. But so are food and sex because they help the individual and the species survive. Drugs of abuse capitalize on this ready-made programming. When exposed to drugs, our memory systems, reward circuits, decision-making skills and conditioning kick in--salience in overdrive--to create an all consuming pattern of uncontrollable craving. "Some people have a genetic predisposition to addiction," says Volkow. "But because it involves these basic brain functions, everyone will become an addict if sufficiently exposed to drugs or alcohol. "

That can go for nonchemical addictions as well. Behaviors, from gambling to shopping to sex, may start out as habits but slide into addictions. Sometimes there might be a behavior-specific root of the problem. Volkow’s research group, for example, has shown that pathologically obese people who are compulsive eaters exhibit hyperactivity in the areas of the brain that process food stimuli--including the mouth, lips and tongue. For them, activating these regions is like opening the floodgates to the pleasure center. Almost anything deeply enjoyable can turn into an addiction, though.

Of course, not everyone becomes an addict. That’s because we have other, more analytical regions that can evaluate consequences and override mere pleasure seeking. Brain imaging is showing exactly how that happens. Paulus, for example, looked at drug addicts enrolled in a VA hospital’s intensive four-week rehabilitation program. Those who were more likely to relapse in the first year after completing the program were also less able to complete tasks involving cognitive skills and less able to adjust to new rules quickly. This suggested that those patients might also be less adept at using analytical areas of the brain while performing decision-making tasks. Sure enough, brain scans showed that there were reduced levels of activation in the prefrontal cortex, where rational thought can override impulsive behavior. It’s impossible to say if the drugs might have damaged these abilities in the relapsers--an effect rather than a cause of the chemical abuse--but the fact that the cognitive deficit existed in only some of the drug users suggests that there was something innate that was unique to them. To his surprise, Paulus found that 80% to 90% of the time, he could accurately predict who would relapse within a year simply by examining the scans.

Another area of focus for researchers involves the brain’s reward system, powered largely by the neurotransmitter dopamine. Investigators are looking specifically at the family of dopamine receptors that populate nerve cells and bind to the compound. The hope is that if you can reduce the effect Of the brain chemical that carries the pleasurable signal, you can loosen the drug’s hold.

Compulsive eaters are typical example of()

A. pleasure turning into habits and finally addiction

B. obese people with brain hyperactivity

C. those who can’t control their mouth, lips and tongue

D. those who might also be addicted to gambling