问题 判断题

机动车通过急转弯路段时,在机动车较少的情况下可以超车。

答案

参考答案:

问答题

阅读下面的文字,完成⑴-⑷题。(25分) 爱国科学家邓叔群经过清华学堂八年苦读,邓叔群于1923年经考试公费留学美国.两时去的同学大多选择学习外交、银行、军事、法律等专业,只有他不听别人劝告,为了解救贫困的中国农民,一心入读康奈尔大学的农林专业。留学期间,目睹同胞受到种族歧视,这激发了他为国争光的民族自尊心,决心在最短的时间内学到最精湛的科学知识。他不仅主科成绩都是A,而且荣获了全美最高科学荣誉学会颁发的两枚金钥趣证幸。正当他博士论文接近完成时,国内岭南大学急需一位植物病理学教授,导师惠凑推荐了他,但建议他完成论文后再回去。邓叔群却认为,学到先进知识报效祖国,正是自己求学的真正目的,于是当即回国。在回国后的十年中,为搜集我国第一手真菌资料,他手提竹篮,攀山入林,一样一样地采集,逐一鉴定,定名分类。他先后研究鉴定的真菌种类达一两千种,分隶于数个属,其中首次发现的新属5个,新种121个,为世界真菌资源宝库增添了新标本,在世界真菌学史上为我国的真菌科学谱写了重要的第一章,向世界宣告了中国有自己的真菌科学。在世界著名真菌分类学家考尔夫教授总结的康奈尔大学120年来作出突出贡献的41位真菌学家中,他是唯一的东方人。抗战开始不久,为了使自己的研究与国计民生关系更为直接,邓叔群转向了林业研究。他带领助手深入云南、西康、四川一带,勘察森林资源状况。他们冒风雨,顶烈日,忍饥寒,摸清了该地区森林资源的组成、分布、蓄积量及病虫害等情况,给制了中国的早期林型图,并提出了合理经营、开发和管理原始森林的研究报告,为大后方建设提供了必要的参考。其中森林的材积估算、轮伐期、更新方法、造林方针等,至今仍有参考价值。后来,邓叔群拒绝就任农林部副部长,而在甘肃省建设厅厅长张心一的支持下,举家奔赴甘肃,开始黄河上游水土保持的研究。经过几年艰苦奋斗,成功创办洮河林场及三个分场,建立了一整套保证森林更新、营造量大于采伐量的制度,创建了以科学的方法经营和管理森林的新模式。邓叔群认为,水利和林、牧之间具有密切关系,要根治黄河水患,就必须三者并重。为保持黄河上游水土、减轻下游灾害:他提出了森林生态平衡理论。1948年,邓叔群当选为中央研究院院士。随后,中央研究院要求全体高级研究人员迁往台湾或去美国。他不仅自己明确表示决不离开,还动员其他同宁共同抵制。他对家人说:“别忘了自己是中国人,要为民族富强而奋斗终生,我决不跟腐败的国民党去台湾,也不去美国。”其实在他内心深处,对 * * 党抱有希望和向往,愿与民族同甘苦,共命运。后来,他早年的学生沈其益受东北解放区领导委托,特地到上海邀请他去东北筹办农学院,他欣然接受邀请,并在半年的时间内,带病编写出一整套农林大学的教材钢要。作为沈阳农学院创建总指挥,他辛勤工作,调度有方,快速、高效地完成了建设设务。邓叔群生活俭朴,不图物质享受,新中国成立后,他把抗日战争前在南京购建的花园洋房捐献给国家,还三次主动提出减薪,抗美援期时,他将自己的积蓄捐作军用。1960年,他受林业部委托,举办森林病理学培训班,为各省培训出教十名专轰技术骨干。培训结束后,他谢绝巨额酬金,只留一张结业合影作纪念。邓叔群一生的选择,都从人民和祖国的需要出发,他以自己的实际行动,践行着科学报国的埋想。 (摘编自《中03真菌学先驱——邓叔群院士》)相关链接①邓叔群(1902-1970),中国真菌学家.福建福州人。曾任岭南大学、金酸大学、中央大学等校教授,中央研究院研究员。新中国成立后,任沈阳农学院和和东北农学院院长、中科院微生物研究所副所长。中科院学部委员(院士)。主要著作有《中国的高等真菌》《中国的真酋》等。(摘自《辞海》第六版)②我自幼被外祖母严氏收养。她教我劳动,晓我勤俭,并以民族英雄岳飞、成继光、林则徐等人的事迹勉勘我;教我做人要坚贞不屈、清正廉洁、光明磊落,这一切促使我从小就立志为中 * * 的强盛奋斗终生。(摘自《中国科学院院士自述邓叔群》)

作为一位爱国科学家,邓叔群有哪些突出表现?请结合材料谈谈你的理解。(8分)

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.

According to the text, anyone may be addicted to drugs if they()

A. are born with a predisposition to addiction

B. use certain chemicals long and frequently enough

C. have sufficient drugs or alcohol to use

D. create an all consuming pattern of uncontrollable craving