问题 单项选择题

入葬时头朝哪方()。

A.东

B.南

C.北

答案

参考答案:C

阅读理解

阅读理解。

     Six-month-old babies are strictly limited in what they can remember about the objects they

see in the world. If you hide several objects from babies, they will only remember one of those

objects. But a new study, which was published in an issue of Psychological Science, a journal

of the Association for Psychological Science, finds that when babies “forget” about an object,

not all is lost. Researchers used to think that babies less than two years old did not understand

than an object continues to exist when it is not in the baby’s view. But in the mid-1980s, new

ways of doing experiments with babies found that they do, if fact, know that objects don’t

disappear when they are not looking at them- a concept know as object permanence. But it

was still unknown what babies needed to remember about objects in order to remember their

existence.

     Now Melissa Kibbe, of Johns Hopkins University, and Alan Leslie, of Rutgers University, are

working to figure out exactly what it is that babies remember about objects. For the new study,

they showed six-month-old babies two objects, a disk and a triangle. Then they hid the objects

behind small screens, first one shape, then the other. Earlier research has shown that young babies

can remember what was hidden most recently, but have more trouble remembering the first object

that was hidden. Once the shapes were hidden, they lifted the screen in front of the first object.

Sometimes they showed babies the shape that was hidden there originally, but sometimes it was

 the other shape, and sometimes the object had vanished completely.

     Psychologists measure how long babies look at something to see how surprised they are. In

Kibbe and Leslie’s study, babies weren’t particularly surprised to see that the shape hidden behind

the screen had changed, for example, from a triangle to a disk. But if the object was gone altogether,

the babies looked significantly longer, indicating surprise at an unexpected outcome. “This shows

that even though babies don’t remember the shape of the object, they know that it should continue

to exist,” Kibbe says. “They remember the object without remembering the features that identify that

object.”

     This helps explain how the young brain processes information about objects, Leslie says. He

thinks the brain has a structure that acts like a kind of pointer, a mental finger that points at an object.

1. Before the study, which of the following was unclear?

A. Whether babies know objects are gone.

B. Why babies were interested in what was hidden.

C. What made babies remember objects’ existence.

D. Whether babies can remember what was hidden first.

2. In the second paragraph, the underlined word “vanished” probably means ______.

A. disappeared

B. forgotten

C. discovered

D. hidden

3. The study is beneficial to know ______.

A. whether babies can remember features of hidden objects

B. how the young brain deals with information about objects

C. whether babies were surprised when they found the objects disappeared

D. why babies less than two years did not understand a hidden object still existed

4. Which would be the best title for the passage?

A. A new concept- object permanence

B. What babies remember about objects

C. A new study on psychology

D. All remembered isn’t lost

单项选择题