问答题There are robots all along, making our lives easier. Some of them, like the (1) _______pocket calculator, can work much more quickly as human beings can. And they   (2) _______rarely make mistakes.  In some ways robots are better than people.. They wo

题目
问答题
There are robots all along, making our lives easier. Some of them, like the (1) _______pocket calculator, can work much more quickly as human beings can. And they    (2) _______rarely make mistakes.  In some ways robots are better than people.. They work quickly, but not tomake mistakes. They do not get boring doing the same job over and over      (3) _______again. And they never get tired.  So are robots very useful in factories. They can be taught to do many    (4) _______different jobs. First their electronic brains must show how the job is done. A  (5) _______person moves the robot’s “arms” and “hand” through each part of the job. Therobot’s brain remembers each move. When the robot is put to work on its itself, (6) _______its brain controls the rods, wheels and motors which move its arm.  When the robot needed for a new job, its electronic memory is “wiped     (7) _______clean”. Then it is taught how to do its new task.  If the robot’s hand stops to work, or if something gets in the way, it    (8) _______cannot do the next part of the job. So it starts and signals for help. Then a  (9) _______human engineer attends to the fault.  Robots are also used for doing jobs which are dangerous. They canmove objects which are too hot or too heavy to people to handle. They can    (10) _______work in places which are too hot or too cold.

相似考题

3.共用题干 The Robot ManAccording to Hans Moravec,universal robots will take over all the physical activities that we engage in,leaving us with little to do.Moravec sees four generations on the road to true universal robots. The first generation will be here by 2010 and will consist of free-ranging robots that can navigate by building an internal mental map of their surroundings.In new situations they'll be able to adapt,unlike today's mobile industrial robots.These robots will have the computing power to cope with simple speech and text recognition,and will be used for tasks such as domestic clean-ing.The second generation will arrive around 2020 and will be distinguished by the ability to learn .Second generation robots are programmed with sets of primitive tasks and with feedback that provide"pleasure"and"pain"stimuli .For example,a collision provokes a negative response,a completed task would be positive.Move forward another ten years to 2030 and you get to generation three.This robot can build internal simulations of the world around it. Before beginning a task,it can imagine what will happen in order to predict problems.If it has a free moment,it can replay past experiences and try variations in order to find a better way of如ing things next time .It could even observe a person or another robot performing a task and learn by imitation.For the first time,we have here a robot that can think.By the time we get to generation four in 2040,Moravec predicts that robots will be able to: match human reasoning and behaviour;generalise abstract ideas from specific experience;and, conversely,compile detailed plans of action from general commands such as"earn a living"or "make more robots".The Moravec manifesto(宣告)runs something like this. As robots start to become useful in generation one,they'll begin to take on many tasks in industry.Driven by the availability of this cheap and tireless labour force,the economy will boom and the demand for robots will grow so rapidly that they will soon become lowcost commodity items.So much so that they'll move into the home,where the domestic robot will relieve us of many chores.With increasing automation in generations two and three,the length of the average working day will plummet,eventually to near zero. Most people will be unemployed as robots take over not just primary industry,but the service economy too.Moravec sees the fourth generation as an opportunity to surpass our human limitations.These future machines will be our"mind children".Like biological children of previous generations,they will embody humanity's best hope for a long-term future. What does Moravec think of these future robots?A: They will look like previous biological children.B: They will be humans' mind-children.C: They will create a dangerous world.D: They will rule the world.

参考答案和解析
正确答案:
1.along改为around all around到处,随处。along表示“顺着,沿着”。
2.as改成than 根据上面的more可知这里要使用连词than引导出比较对象。
3.boring改为bored
boring(某物)令人厌倦的,使人讨厌的。bored(某人)感到厌倦的。
4.are与robots对调 so此处作“因此”讲,句子不用倒装。如果表示“…也如此”时,就要用倒装结构。
5.show改为be shown 这里their electronic brains和show是逻辑动宾关系,因此要使用被动语态。
6.itself改为own
on one’s own/by oneself“自己,独自”,是固定搭配。
7.在needed前加is
need和主语the robot是逻辑动宾关系,因此这里要使用被动语态。
8.to work改为working
stop doing sth.停止做某事。stop doing sth.停下来以便做某事。
9.starts改为stops 这里要表达“停下来”的意思,而不是“开始,着手”。
10.将第一个to改为for
adj+for sb. to do sth.是固定说法。
解析: 暂无解析
更多“问答题There are robots all along, making our lives easier. Some of them, like the (1) _______pocket calculator, can work much more quickly as human beings can. And they   (2) _______rarely make mistakes.  In some ways robots are better than people.. They wor”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,Will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They will also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    What is the writer's attitude to robots in the future?
    A:Critical.
    B:Hostile.
    C:Objective.
    D:Enthusiastic.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第2题:

    共用题干
    The Robot Man
    According to Hans Moravec,universal robots will take over all the physical activities that we engage in,leaving us with little to do.Moravec sees four generations on the road to true universal robots. The first generation will be here by 2010 and will consist of free-ranging robots that can navigate by building an internal mental map of their surroundings.In new situations they'll be able to adapt,unlike today's mobile industrial robots.These robots will have the computing power to cope with simple speech and text recognition,and will be used for tasks such as domestic clean-ing.
    The second generation will arrive around 2020 and will be distinguished by the ability to learn .Second generation robots are programmed with sets of primitive tasks and with feedback that provide"pleasure"and"pain"stimuli .For example,a collision provokes a negative response,a completed task would be positive.
    Move forward another ten years to 2030 and you get to generation three.This robot can build internal simulations of the world around it. Before beginning a task,it can imagine what will happen in order to predict problems.If it has a free moment,it can replay past experiences and try variations in order to find a better way of如ing things next time .It could even observe a person or another robot performing a task and learn by imitation.For the first time,we have here a robot that can think.
    By the time we get to generation four in 2040,Moravec predicts that robots will be able to: match human reasoning and behaviour;generalise abstract ideas from specific experience;and, conversely,compile detailed plans of action from general commands such as"earn a living"or "make more robots".
    The Moravec manifesto(宣告)runs something like this. As robots start to become useful in generation one,they'll begin to take on many tasks in industry.Driven by the availability of this cheap and tireless labour force,the economy will boom and the demand for robots will grow so rapidly that they will soon become lowcost commodity items.So much so that they'll move into the home,where the domestic robot will relieve us of many chores.
    With increasing automation in generations two and three,the length of the average working day will plummet,eventually to near zero. Most people will be unemployed as robots take over not just primary industry,but the service economy too.Moravec sees the fourth generation as an opportunity to surpass our human limitations.
    These future machines will be our"mind children".Like biological children of previous generations,they will embody humanity's best hope for a long-term future.

    The author's main purpose is to______.
    A: describe the life of Hans Moravec
    B: support the view that robots will play a major role in our life
    C: make fun of the views of Hans Moravec
    D: get people prepared for the threat of future robots

    答案:B
    解析:
    问题是:第二代机器人的显著特点是什么?本文第二段的第一句话是:" The second generation will arrive around 2020 and will be distinguished by the ability to learn.”因此,第二代机器人的显著特点是具有“自主学习”的能力,他能根据设定的程序提供“快乐”或 “痛苦”的刺激。A项没有提到;C和D讲述的是第三代和第四代机器人的特点。


    本文第五、六段阐述了未来机器人的能力。第五段的最后一句是“... where the domestic robot will relieve us of many chores.”其余三个选项与文中内容不符。


    作者的写作目的显然不是描述Hans Moravec的生平,而全文都是客观地论述了未来几代机器人的趋势,没有任何主观色彩。所以,A和C显然不对;选项D没有提到。


    " plummet”是“急速下降”的意思。也可根据后面的“... eventually to near zero"(最终降到零)判断,stretch , extend , grow的意思是“伸展”,“扩大”,“增长”,因此都不对。


    本文最后一段“These future machines will be our ‘ mind children ’ like biological children...”说明了未来机器人是懂得我们思想的孩子。like biological children意思是(在懂得我们思想方面)他们像我们生的孩子,并不是“they look like previous biological children"(长得像);C、D没有提到。

  • 第3题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,Will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They will also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    What makes Cog special?
    A:It looks like a mother.
    B:It behaves like a child.
    C:It can imitate the behavior of a mother.
    D:It has a huge brain.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第4题:

    共用题干
    The Robot Man
    According to Hans Moravec,universal robots will take over all the physical activities that we engage in,leaving us with little to do.Moravec sees four generations on the road to true universal robots. The first generation will be here by 2010 and will consist of free-ranging robots that can navigate by building an internal mental map of their surroundings.In new situations they'll be able to adapt,unlike today's mobile industrial robots.These robots will have the computing power to cope with simple speech and text recognition,and will be used for tasks such as domestic clean-ing.
    The second generation will arrive around 2020 and will be distinguished by the ability to learn .Second generation robots are programmed with sets of primitive tasks and with feedback that provide"pleasure"and"pain"stimuli .For example,a collision provokes a negative response,a completed task would be positive.
    Move forward another ten years to 2030 and you get to generation three.This robot can build internal simulations of the world around it. Before beginning a task,it can imagine what will happen in order to predict problems.If it has a free moment,it can replay past experiences and try variations in order to find a better way of如ing things next time .It could even observe a person or another robot performing a task and learn by imitation.For the first time,we have here a robot that can think.
    By the time we get to generation four in 2040,Moravec predicts that robots will be able to: match human reasoning and behaviour;generalise abstract ideas from specific experience;and, conversely,compile detailed plans of action from general commands such as"earn a living"or "make more robots".
    The Moravec manifesto(宣告)runs something like this. As robots start to become useful in generation one,they'll begin to take on many tasks in industry.Driven by the availability of this cheap and tireless labour force,the economy will boom and the demand for robots will grow so rapidly that they will soon become lowcost commodity items.So much so that they'll move into the home,where the domestic robot will relieve us of many chores.
    With increasing automation in generations two and three,the length of the average working day will plummet,eventually to near zero. Most people will be unemployed as robots take over not just primary industry,but the service economy too.Moravec sees the fourth generation as an opportunity to surpass our human limitations.
    These future machines will be our"mind children".Like biological children of previous generations,they will embody humanity's best hope for a long-term future.

    What will be the distinctive feature of the second generation robots?
    A: They will be able to recogilize speeches and texts.
    B: They will be able to learn by themselves.
    C: They will be able to predict problems.
    D: They will be able to match human reasoning and behaviour.

    答案:B
    解析:
    问题是:第二代机器人的显著特点是什么?本文第二段的第一句话是:" The second generation will arrive around 2020 and will be distinguished by the ability to learn.”因此,第二代机器人的显著特点是具有“自主学习”的能力,他能根据设定的程序提供“快乐”或 “痛苦”的刺激。A项没有提到;C和D讲述的是第三代和第四代机器人的特点。


    本文第五、六段阐述了未来机器人的能力。第五段的最后一句是“... where the domestic robot will relieve us of many chores.”其余三个选项与文中内容不符。


    作者的写作目的显然不是描述Hans Moravec的生平,而全文都是客观地论述了未来几代机器人的趋势,没有任何主观色彩。所以,A和C显然不对;选项D没有提到。


    " plummet”是“急速下降”的意思。也可根据后面的“... eventually to near zero"(最终降到零)判断,stretch , extend , grow的意思是“伸展”,“扩大”,“增长”,因此都不对。


    本文最后一段“These future machines will be our ‘ mind children ’ like biological children...”说明了未来机器人是懂得我们思想的孩子。like biological children意思是(在懂得我们思想方面)他们像我们生的孩子,并不是“they look like previous biological children"(长得像);C、D没有提到。

  • 第5题:

    共用题干
    Wide World of Robots
    Engineers who build and program robots have fascinating jobs. These researchers tinker (修补)with machines in the lab and write computer software to control these devices.
    “They're the best toys out there,” says Howie Choset at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Choset is a roboticist,a person who designs,builds or programs robots.
    When Choset was a kid,he was interested in anything that moved一cars,trains,animals. He put motors on Tinkertoy cars to make them move. Later,in high school,he built mobile robots similar to small cars.
    Hoping to continue working on robots,he studied computer science in college. But when he got to graduate school at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena,Choset's lab- mates were working on something even cooler than remotely controlled cars:robotic snakes. Some robots can move only forward,backward,left and right. But snakes can twist(扭曲)in many directions and travel over a lot of different types of terrain(地形).“Snakes are far more interesting than the cars,”Choset concluded.
    After he started working at Carnegie Mellon,Choset and his colleagues there began developing their own snake robots.Choset's team programmed robots to perform the same movements as real snakes,such as sliding and inching forward. The robots also moved in ways that snakes usually don't, such as rolling. Choset's snake robots could crawl(爬行) through the grass,swim in a pond and even climb a flagpole.
    But Choset wondered if his snakes might be useful for medicine as well. For some heart surgeries,the doctor has to open a patient's chest,cutting through the breastbone. Recovering from these surgeries can be very painful. What if the doctor could perform the operation by instead making a small hole in the body and sending in a thin robotic snake?
    Choset teamed up with Marco Zenati,a heart surgeon now at Harvard Medical School,to investigate the idea. Zenati practiced using the robot on a plastic model of the chest and then tested the robot in pigs.
    A company called Medrobotics in Boston is now adapting the technology to surgeries on people.
    Even after 15 years of working with his team's creations,”I still don't get bored of watching the motion of my robots,”Choset says.

    Choset began to build robots in high school.
    A: Right
    B: Wrong
    C: Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:
    题干意为“乔赛特在高中时开始制造机器人。”关键词是high school。依据 此关键词,可在文中第二段找到相关叙述:”When Choset was a kid, he was interested in anything that moved...Later,in high school,he built mobile robots similar to small cars.”(当 乔赛特还是个孩子的时候就对一切会动的东西感兴趣……之后,在高中期间,他制造了与小汽车相似的移动机器人。)由此可知,乔赛特是从高中开始制造机器人的,故此题说法为“正 确”的。
    题干意为“蛇形机器人只能朝四个方向移动。”关健词组是only four directions。依据此关键词组,可在文中第三段第三、四句找到相关叙述:”Some robots can move only forward,backward,left and right.But snakes can twist in many directions and travel over a lot of different types of terrain. ”(有些机器人只能向前后左右四个方向移动,但是蛇形 机器人可以朝很多方向弯曲,并且能越过不同类型的地形。)由此可知,蛇形机器人并不仅仅能 朝四个方向移动,故此题说法为“错误”的。
    题干意为“乔赛特直到在卡耐基梅隆工作时才开始研制自己的蛇形机器人。”关键词是Carnegie Mellon。依据此关键词,可在文中第四段第一句找到相关叙述:“ After he started working at Carnegie Mellon,Choset and his colleagues there began developing their own snake robots.”(在卡耐基梅隆开始工作之后,乔赛特和同事们开始研制蛇形机器 人。)故此题说法为“正确”的。
    题干意为“与别人研发的蛇形机器人相比,乔赛特的蛇形机器人能做更多的 动作。”关键词是movements。依据此关健词,可在文中第四段第二、三、四句找到相关叙述: ”Choset's team programmed robots to perform the same movements as real snakes,such as sliding and inching forward. The robots also moved in ways that snakes usually don't,such as rolling. Choset's snake robots could crawl through the grass,swim in a pond and even climb a flagpole.”(乔赛特团队设计的程序可以让机器人做出与真蛇一样的动作,比如滑行和向前缓慢移动。这些机器人还能做出通常情况下蛇无法做出的动作,比如旋转。乔赛特的蛇形机器人可以在草丛中爬行,在池塘里游泳,甚至还能爬旗杆。)由此可知,与那些可以朝很多方向运动,能在多种地形中前行的机器人相比,乔赛特的蛇形机器人能做出更多的动作。故此 题说法为“正确”的。
    题干意为“细小的蛇形机器人的应用可以使心脏手术用时减少。”关键词是 heart surgeries。依据此关键词组,可在文中第五段第二、三、四句找到相关叙述:”For some heart surgeries,the doctor has to open a patient's chest,cutting through the breastbone. Recovering from these surgeries can be very painful. What if the doctor could perform the operation by instead making a small hole in the body and sending in a thin robotic snake?”(对于某些心脏手术,医生需要透过胸骨为病人开胸。这样的手术恢复起来非常痛苦。如果医生做这 样的手术时只是开一个小洞然后把一个细小的蛇形机器人送入身体会怎么样呢?)这里说原来 的某些心脏手术比较复杂,且恢复起来会很痛苦,但是并没有提到时间的问题,故此说法为“未提及”的。
    题干意为“将机器人在猪身上测试之后,赞纳提将其在人身上进行了测试。” 关键词是Zenati和pigs。依据关键词。可在文中第六段第二句找到相关叙述:”Zenati practiced using the robot on a plastic model of the chest and then tested the robot in pigs.”(赞纳提在一个塑料的胸部模型上练习使用机器人,然后又在猪身上测试机器人。)由此可知,赞纳提 确实在猪身上测试过机器人,但之后他有没有在人身上测试文中并没有提到,故此说法为“未提及”的。
    题干意为“用于人体手术的机器人技术已经为Medrobotics带来了丰厚的利润。”关键词是Medrobotics。依据此关键词,可在文中第七段找到相关叙述:” A company called Medrobotics in Boston is now adapting the technology for surgeries on people.”(在波士顿,一家名为Medrobotics的公司现在已经将这项技术用于人体手术。)文中并没有提及这 项技术给这家公司带来多少利润,故此说法为“未提及”的。

  • 第6题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.To enable robots to serve humans.
    B.To decrease humans fear about robots.
    C.To make robots more human-like.
    D.To equip robots with human emotions.

    答案:C
    解析:
    本题考查的是推理判断。
    【关键词】anthropomorphise;Paragraph 10
    【主题句】第10自然段She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10) 她说,类人机器人在增进某些群体(如老年人)之间的信任和参与度方面发挥积极作用;在任何情况下,人类都倾向于将技术拟人化;机器人可以被程式限制在促进利他主义的积极情绪中。
    【解析】本题问的是“anthropomorphise一词在第10段中是什么意思?”选项A意为“让机器人为人类服务”。选项B意为“减少人类对机器人的恐惧”。选项C意为“让机器人更像人类”。选项D意为“用人类的情感武装机器人”。根据句子意思可以推断出“anthropomorphise”一词意为“拟人格化;赋予人性”。

  • 第7题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.It is important for robots to learn about the context so as to understand human emotions.
    B.Whether humanoids will have human emotions themselves still remains unclear.
    C.It is a stigma for robots to have different layers of human emotions.
    D.The nature of human emotions will hinder the development of humanoids.

    答案:A
    解析:
    本题考查的是细节理解。
    【关键词】Dr Gunes;true;robots and human emotions
    【主题句】第6自然段Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. 她的研究调查了类人机器人如何被编程的,不仅能够提取和回应面部表情对情绪的暗示,而且能够理解这些情绪表达的背景。
    第7自然段Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli.那么机器人本身能够拥有情感吗?Gunes博士表示,认为机器人不能有情感毫无道理,并且质疑情绪的含义。在与机器人人工情感智能合作的过程揭示了我们情绪的本质,对它们而言是不同目标,经验和刺激的分层。
    【解析】本题问的是“根据Gunes博士的观点,以下哪个关于机器人和人类情感的说法是正确的?”选项A意为“为了理解人类情感,机器人了解其背景至关重要”。选项B意为“类人机器人本身是否会拥有人类情感不得而知”。选项C意为“机器人拥有不同层次的人类情感是一种耻辱。”选项D意为“人类情感的本质会阻碍类人机器人的发展。”根据主题句可知,选项A正确。根据第七段可知,人工智能是否会拥有人类情绪是明确的,故B错误。选项C和D在文中并未提及。

  • 第8题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.it is not meaningful for robots to have the appearance of human
    B.people who make the appearance of robots very human-like should be blamed
    C.people need to pay more attention to the development of robots’functions
    D.the appearance of robots has become more and more emotional

    答案:C
    解析:
    本题考查的是细节理解。
    【关键词】Dr Gunes says“…”;believes,paragraph 3
    【主题句】第3自然段However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. 然而,比外表更重要的是他们的行为和情感表达能力。Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit…她的讲话将着重于人工智能机器人的互动和机器人如何使用才能有益于我们……
    【解析】本题问的是:Gunes博士说“我们需要超越对类人机器人的感性描述”(第3段),因为她相信_______________。选项A意为“机器人拥有人类的外表是没有意义的”。选项B意为“应当谴责那些使机器人看起来很像人类的人”。选项C意为“人们需要更多地关注机器人功能的发展”。选项D意为“机器人的外观变得越来越有情感”。根据关键词,找到主题句,可知,Gunes博士之所以这么说,是因为人类需要关注机器人的使用以有益于人类发展,结合题意,故选C。

  • 第9题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They wi}{also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    In the future robots will also
    A:explore space.
    B:entertain people.
    C:move much faster.
    D:do all of the housework.

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第10题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They wi}{also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    What is the writer's attitude to robots in the future?
    A:Critical.
    B:Hostile.
    C:Objective.
    D:Enthusiastic.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第11题:

    From childhood to old age, we all use language as a means of broadening our knowledge of ourselves and the world about us. When humans first 1 , they were like newborn children, unable to use this 2 tool. Yet once language developed, the possibilities for human kind’s future 3 and cultural growth increased. Many linguists believe that evolution is 4 for our ability to produce and use language. They 5 that our highly evolved brain provides us 6 an innate language ability not found in lower 7 . Proponents of this innateness theory say that our 8 for language is inborn, but that language itself develops gradually, 9 a function of the growth of the brain during childhood. Therefore there are critical 10 times for language development. Current 11 of innateness theory are mixed, however, evidence supporting the existence of some innate abilities is undeniable. 12 , more and more schools are discovering that foreign languages are best taught in 13 grades. Young children often can learn several languages by being 14 to them, while adults have a much harder time learning another language once the 15 of their first language have become firmly fixed. 16 some aspects of language are undeniably innate, language does not develop automatically in a vacuum. Children who have been 17 from other human beings do not possess language. This demonstrates that 18 with other human beings is necessary for proper language development. Some linguists believe that this is even more basic to human language 19 than any innate capacities. These theorists view language as imitative, learned behavior. 20 , children learn language from their parents by imitating them. Parents gradually shape their child's language skills by positively reinforcing precise imitations and negatively reinforcing imprecise ones. 请在20处填上正确答案()

    • A、As a result
    • B、After all
    • C、In other words
    • D、Above all

    正确答案:C

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    Besides reducing human labor, robots can also ______.
    A

    make a few decisions for themselves

    B

    deal with some errors with human intervention

    C

    improve factory environments

    D

    cultivate human creativity


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    细节题。末段第二句提到,人类制造的机器人在被控制的工厂环境下能识别仪器板上的极小误差。从中可看出,人类制造的机器人除了可以减少人类的劳动外,还可以在人的监控下处理具体错误。所以B项正确,C项错误。从第三段第一句话可看出让机器人自己做一些决定还是具有挑战性的,也就是说机器人还不能自己做决定,所以A项错误。D项颠倒了人类创造力与机器人之间的因果关系,故也可排除。

  • 第13题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,Will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They will also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    In about 1 5 years' time from now,robots
    A:will become space designers.
    B:will look like monsters.
    C:will behave like animals.
    D:will think like humans.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第14题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,Will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They will also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    In the future robots will also
    A:explore space.
    B:entertain people.
    C:move much faster.
    D:do all of the housework.

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第15题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,Will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They will also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    Kismet is different from traditional robots because
    A:it thinks for itself.
    B:it is not like science fiction.
    C:it can look after two-year-olds.
    D:it seems to have human feelings.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第16题:

    共用题干
    Wide World of Robots
    Engineers who build and program robots have fascinating jobs. These researchers tinker (修补)with machines in the lab and write computer software to control these devices.
    “They're the best toys out there,” says Howie Choset at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Choset is a roboticist,a person who designs,builds or programs robots.
    When Choset was a kid,he was interested in anything that moved一cars,trains,animals. He put motors on Tinkertoy cars to make them move. Later,in high school,he built mobile robots similar to small cars.
    Hoping to continue working on robots,he studied computer science in college. But when he got to graduate school at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena,Choset's lab- mates were working on something even cooler than remotely controlled cars:robotic snakes. Some robots can move only forward,backward,left and right. But snakes can twist(扭曲)in many directions and travel over a lot of different types of terrain(地形).“Snakes are far more interesting than the cars,”Choset concluded.
    After he started working at Carnegie Mellon,Choset and his colleagues there began developing their own snake robots.Choset's team programmed robots to perform the same movements as real snakes,such as sliding and inching forward. The robots also moved in ways that snakes usually don't, such as rolling. Choset's snake robots could crawl(爬行) through the grass,swim in a pond and even climb a flagpole.
    But Choset wondered if his snakes might be useful for medicine as well. For some heart surgeries,the doctor has to open a patient's chest,cutting through the breastbone. Recovering from these surgeries can be very painful. What if the doctor could perform the operation by instead making a small hole in the body and sending in a thin robotic snake?
    Choset teamed up with Marco Zenati,a heart surgeon now at Harvard Medical School,to investigate the idea. Zenati practiced using the robot on a plastic model of the chest and then tested the robot in pigs.
    A company called Medrobotics in Boston is now adapting the technology to surgeries on people.
    Even after 15 years of working with his team's creations,”I still don't get bored of watching the motion of my robots,”Choset says.

    Choset's snake robots could make more movements than the ones others developed.
    A: Right
    B: Wrong
    C: Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:
    题干意为“乔赛特在高中时开始制造机器人。”关键词是high school。依据 此关键词,可在文中第二段找到相关叙述:”When Choset was a kid, he was interested in anything that moved...Later,in high school,he built mobile robots similar to small cars.”(当 乔赛特还是个孩子的时候就对一切会动的东西感兴趣……之后,在高中期间,他制造了与小汽车相似的移动机器人。)由此可知,乔赛特是从高中开始制造机器人的,故此题说法为“正 确”的。
    题干意为“蛇形机器人只能朝四个方向移动。”关健词组是only four directions。依据此关键词组,可在文中第三段第三、四句找到相关叙述:”Some robots can move only forward,backward,left and right.But snakes can twist in many directions and travel over a lot of different types of terrain. ”(有些机器人只能向前后左右四个方向移动,但是蛇形 机器人可以朝很多方向弯曲,并且能越过不同类型的地形。)由此可知,蛇形机器人并不仅仅能 朝四个方向移动,故此题说法为“错误”的。
    题干意为“乔赛特直到在卡耐基梅隆工作时才开始研制自己的蛇形机器人。”关键词是Carnegie Mellon。依据此关键词,可在文中第四段第一句找到相关叙述:“ After he started working at Carnegie Mellon,Choset and his colleagues there began developing their own snake robots.”(在卡耐基梅隆开始工作之后,乔赛特和同事们开始研制蛇形机器 人。)故此题说法为“正确”的。
    题干意为“与别人研发的蛇形机器人相比,乔赛特的蛇形机器人能做更多的 动作。”关键词是movements。依据此关健词,可在文中第四段第二、三、四句找到相关叙述: ”Choset's team programmed robots to perform the same movements as real snakes,such as sliding and inching forward. The robots also moved in ways that snakes usually don't,such as rolling. Choset's snake robots could crawl through the grass,swim in a pond and even climb a flagpole.”(乔赛特团队设计的程序可以让机器人做出与真蛇一样的动作,比如滑行和向前缓慢移动。这些机器人还能做出通常情况下蛇无法做出的动作,比如旋转。乔赛特的蛇形机器人可以在草丛中爬行,在池塘里游泳,甚至还能爬旗杆。)由此可知,与那些可以朝很多方向运动,能在多种地形中前行的机器人相比,乔赛特的蛇形机器人能做出更多的动作。故此 题说法为“正确”的。
    题干意为“细小的蛇形机器人的应用可以使心脏手术用时减少。”关键词是 heart surgeries。依据此关键词组,可在文中第五段第二、三、四句找到相关叙述:”For some heart surgeries,the doctor has to open a patient's chest,cutting through the breastbone. Recovering from these surgeries can be very painful. What if the doctor could perform the operation by instead making a small hole in the body and sending in a thin robotic snake?”(对于某些心脏手术,医生需要透过胸骨为病人开胸。这样的手术恢复起来非常痛苦。如果医生做这 样的手术时只是开一个小洞然后把一个细小的蛇形机器人送入身体会怎么样呢?)这里说原来 的某些心脏手术比较复杂,且恢复起来会很痛苦,但是并没有提到时间的问题,故此说法为“未提及”的。
    题干意为“将机器人在猪身上测试之后,赞纳提将其在人身上进行了测试。” 关键词是Zenati和pigs。依据关键词。可在文中第六段第二句找到相关叙述:”Zenati practiced using the robot on a plastic model of the chest and then tested the robot in pigs.”(赞纳提在一个塑料的胸部模型上练习使用机器人,然后又在猪身上测试机器人。)由此可知,赞纳提 确实在猪身上测试过机器人,但之后他有没有在人身上测试文中并没有提到,故此说法为“未提及”的。
    题干意为“用于人体手术的机器人技术已经为Medrobotics带来了丰厚的利润。”关键词是Medrobotics。依据此关键词,可在文中第七段找到相关叙述:” A company called Medrobotics in Boston is now adapting the technology for surgeries on people.”(在波士顿,一家名为Medrobotics的公司现在已经将这项技术用于人体手术。)文中并没有提及这 项技术给这家公司带来多少利润,故此说法为“未提及”的。

  • 第17题:

    Robots came into the world as a literary device whereby the writers and film-makers of the early 20th centu0'could explore their hopes and fears about technology,as the era of the automobile,telephone and aeroplane picked up its reckless jazz-age speed.From Fritz Lang's Metropolis and Isaac Asimov's l,Robot to WALL-E and the Terrnirator films,and in countless repetitions in between,they have succeeded admirably in their task.41.Since moving from the page and screen lo real life,robots have been a mild disappointment.They do some things that humans cannot do themselves,like exploring Mars,and a host of things people do not much want to do,like dealing with unexploded bombs or vacuuming floors.And they are very useful in bits of manufacturing.But reliable robots-especially ones required to work beyond the safety cages of a factory flom-have proved hard to make,and robots are still pretty stupid.So although they fascinate people,they have not yet made much of a mark on the world 42.That seems about to change.The exponential growth in the power of silicon chips,digital sensors and high-bandwidth communications improves robots just as it improves all sorts of other products.And,as our special report this week explains,three other factors are at play.43.One is that robotics R&D is getting easier.New shared standards make good ideas easily porta-ble from one robot platform to another.And accumulated know-how means that building such plat-forms is Setting a lot cheaper.A robot like Rethink Robotics's Baxter,with two arms and a remarkably easy,inLuiLive proyammrng interface,would have been barely conceivable ten years ago.Now you can buy one for$25,000.44.A second factor is investment.The biggest robot news of 2013 was that Goog1e bought eight promising robot startups.Rich and well led and with access to world-beating expertise in cloud computing and artificial intelligence,both highly relevant,Google's robot programme promises the possibility of something spectacular-though no one outside the company knows what that might be.Amazon,too,is betting on robots,both to automate its warehouses and,more speculaLively,to make deliveries by drone.In South Korea and elsewhere companies are movinS robot technology to new areas of manufacturing and other services.Venture capitalists see a much better chance of a profitable exit from a robotics srartup than they used to.45.The third factor is imagination.In the past few years,clever companies have seen ways to make robots work.Now more people will grasp how a robotic attribute such as high precision or fast reac-tions or independent locomotion can be integrated into a profitable business;eventually some of them will build mass markets.Aerial robots-drones-may be in the vanguarcl here.They willlet farmers tend their crops in new ways,give citizens,journalists and broadcasters new perspectives on events big and small,monitor traffic and fires,look for infrastniccure in need of repair and much more besides.41选?

    A.Robots Come from Lhe Movies.
    B.Development of Robots Is Fast.
    C.Google Enters the Robot Industry.
    D.Robots Today Are Not Impressive EnouS;h.

    答案:D
    解析:
    本段主旨出现在首句Since moving from the page and screen toreal life,robots have been a mild disappointment.“从书本和屏幕里到现实生活中,机器人不免有点令人失望。”本段最后一句再次指出:So although they fascinate people,they have not yet made much of a mark on the world.“尽管人们喜爱机器人,但是它们还未在世界上留下很多印迹。”而倒数第二句还提到:robots are slill pretty slupid“机器人还不够智能”,所有这些都在告诉我们该段大意:如今的机器人还不够先进。只有[D]项Robots Today Are Nol Impressive Enough“如今的机器人还不够令人印象深刻”与之相符,故本题答案为[D]。

  • 第18题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.Neutral
    B.Positive
    C.Negative
    D.Critical

    答案:B
    解析:
    本题考查的是主旨大意。
    【关键词】tone
    【主题句】第12自然段She adds: “Understanding robots will empower people so they can help to shape them to do good.她补充道:“了解机器人会使人类拥有强大的力量,这样人类就可以帮助改造它们来做有益的事。”
    【解析】本题问的是“哪个词最能形容本文的基调?”选项A意为“”中性。选项B意为“积极”。选项C意为“消极”。选项D意为“批评”。文章整体都在描述机器人有利于人类发展,人类不应该害怕机器人,因此本文的基调是积极的。

  • 第19题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.With the development of human robot interaction, robots ae now able to communicate with humans in an effective way.
    B.Scientists have many challenges in developing robots, such as how to modify their appearance and behavior.
    C.Human emotions enable robots to win the trust from human, especially the elderly and children.
    D.It is important to help people understand robots in order to develop robots to human needs.

    答案:D
    解析:
    本题考查的是主旨大意。
    【关键词】the main idea
    【主题句】第1自然段Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1) 揭开社交机器人和类人机器人如何工作的神秘面纱至关重要,这样我们才能了解并改造它们将影响未来人类的方式,Hatice Gunes博士将在下周的海伊艺术节发表演讲。(1)
    第12自然段She adds: “Understanding robots will empower people so they can help to shape them to do good. The public is usually on the receiving end of new technology. Demystifying robots gives people back the power to push for change and create the robots they want.” (12) 她补充说:“了解机器人会使人类拥有强大的力量,这样人类就可以帮助改造它们来做有益的事。。”公众通常是新技术的接受者。揭开机器人的神秘面纱可以让人们重新获得力量,来推动变革,并创造他们想要的机器人。”(12)
    【解析】本题的问题是:这篇文章的中心思想是?选项A意为“随着人机交互技术的发展,机器人现在能够有效地与人类进行交流。”选项B意为“科学家在开发机器人时面临许多挑战,例如如何修改机器人的外观和行为。”选项C意为“人类的情感使机器人能够赢得人类特别是老人和儿童的信任。”选项D意为“为了开发出满足人类需求的机器人,帮助人们了解机器人是很重要的。”结合主题句可知,本文主要介绍的是人工智能机器人发展遇到的最大困境是人类的不理解和人类对机器人的恐惧,故本题选D。

  • 第20题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They wi}{also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    What makes Cog special?
    A:It looks like a mother.
    B:It behaves like a child.
    C:It can imitate the behavior of a mother.
    D:It has a huge brain.

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第21题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They wi}{also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    In about 15 years' time from now,robots
    A:will become space designers.
    B:will look like monsters.
    C:will behave like animals.
    D:will think like humans.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第22题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Almost Human?

    Scientists are racing to build the world's first thinking robot.This is not science fiction:
    some say they will have made it by the year 2020.Carol Packer reports.
    Machines that walk,speak and feel are no longer science fiction.Kismet is the name
    of an android(机器人)which scientists have built at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology(MIT).Kismet is different from the traditional robot because it can show
    human emotions.Its eyes,ears and lips move to show when it feels happy,sad or bored.
    Kismet is one of the first of a new generation of androids一robots that look like human
    beings一which can imitate human feelings.Cog,another android invented by the MIT,
    imitates the action of a mother. However,scientists admit that so far Cog has the mental
    ability of a two-year-old.
    The optimists(乐观主义者)say that by the year 2020 we will have created humanoids
    (机器人)with brains similar to those of an adult human being. These robots will be
    designed to look like people to make them more attractive and easier to sell to the public.
    What kind of jobs will they do?In the future,robots like Robonaut,a humanoid invented by
    NASA,will be doing dangerous jobs,like repairing space stations.They wi}{also be doing
    more and more of the household work for us.In Japan,scientists are designing androids
    that will entertain us by dancing and playing the piano.
    Some people worry about what the future holds:will robots become monsters(怪物)?
    Will people themselves become increasingly like robots?Experts predict that more and more
    people will be wearing micro-computers,connected to the Internet,in the future.People
    will have micro-chips in various parts of their body,which will connect them to a wide variety
    of gadgets(小装置).Perhaps we should not exaggerate(夸大)the importance of
    technology,but one wonders whether,in years to come,we will still be falling in love,
    and whether we will still feel pain.Who knows?

    Kismet is different from traditional robots because
    A:it thinks for itself.
    B:itis not like science fiction.
    C:it can look after two-year-olds.
    D:it seems to have human feelings.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第23题:

    问答题
    This book is about the future of technology. In it we will examine some of the many recent developments in a few key fields and try, in a limited way, to predict where they will take us in the next fifteen years or (1)____.  If that sounds like a modest goal, it’s not. Technology is the (2)____(dominate) force of our time and probably of all time to come. It appears in more varieties than we can count. It changes so rapidly (3)____ no scientist or engineer can keep up with his own field, much less with technology in general. It permeates and shapes our lives at every turn. We live in technology (4)____ fish live in the sea, and we have only a little better chance of (5) f____ the details of its future changes.  Yet the task is well worth undertaking. Whatever hints we can glean (一点点搜集) about the future win help us prepare for the changes to come. Modest forecasts, evidence of trends, a few concrete developments to be expected all are better than no warning at all. And (6) th____ technology has made the present much less stable than the past, and surely will make the future more disturbed still, there is good reason to hope that our lives, in sum and on average, will be better as a result. In an age of uncomfortable (7) ch____, this is reassurance(保证) we all can use.  For an idea of what is to come—in magnitude if not in (8) sp____—look to the past. In the last ninety years, the world has shrunk, while human experience has advanced almost beyond the recognition of these who grew up in our grandparent’s generation.A century after America’s (9)____(found) conceived their agrarian (耕地的) democracy, nearly all their descendents still lived on fanning. Since World War I, technology has extracted us from behind horse-drawn plows and plugged us into (10) as____ lines and offices. Today it is removing many of us from offices and letting us work at home or forcing us to work on the road.

    正确答案:
    1.so 本句译文:在这本书里,我们将检查几个关键领域的一些最新进展,并且在某种程度上预测它们在未来的15年左右将把我们带向何处。or so大约,左右。
    2.dominant dominant支配的;占优势的。本句译文:技术是我们这个时代、或许包括未来所有时间的支配力量。
    3.that 考查so+adj. /adv. +that句型。。本句译文:它变化得如此之快,以至于没有科学家或工程师能紧跟上他自己的研究领域。更不用说总体的科技。
    4.as as做连词,“像……一样”。本句译文:我们生活在科技中,就像鱼生活在水里,我们只不过在预测技术未来的细节变化上有更大一点的可能性。
    5.forecasting forecast与后面的“its future changes”语义上搭配。
    6.though 弄清此长句的主句是“there is good reason…”。前半句表示“现在更不稳定”,后半句表示“生活因此更好”,所以两句之间应为转折关系,填though。
    7.challenges challenges挑战。本句译文:在这个充满不安挑战的年代,这是我们都能依靠的保证。
    8.specifics specifics详情,细节(particular details)。本句译文:要解答将来会出现什么——重大的还是点滴的——的问题,请回顾过去。
    9.founders founders(创建者)与后面的descendents(后代)搭配。本句译文:在美利坚创建者构思耕地民主化后的一个世纪里,几乎他们所有的后代子孙仍以耕地维持生计。
    10.assembly assembly line装配线。
    解析: 暂无解析