皮皮学,免费搜题
登录
搜题
【单选题】
听力原文: Some people never forget a face. Heather Sellers never remembers one. She finds it almost impossible to recognize people simply by looking at them. She remembers the books she reads as well as anyone else, but movies and TV shows are impossible to follow because all of the actors' faces seem so similar. She can recall a name or a telephone number with ease, but she is unable to remember her own face well enough to pick it out in a group photograph. Dr. Sellers, a professor of English at Hope College in Holland, Mich., has a disorder called prosopagnosia, or face blindness, and she has had it since birth. 'I see faces that are human,' she said, 'but they all look more or less the same. It's like looking at a bunch of dogs: some may seem a little older or smaller or bigger, but essentially they ail look alike.' Face blindness can be a rare result of a stroke or a brain injury, but a study published in the July issue of American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A is the first report of the prevalence of a congenital or developmental form. of the disorder: The researchers say the phenomenon is much more common than previously believed: they found that 2.47 percent of 689 randomly selected students in Miinster, Germany, had the disorder. Dr.Gruter is himself prosopagnosic. His wife and co-author, Dr. Martina Gruter of the Institute for Human Genetics of the University of Munster, did not realize he was face blind until she had known him more than 20 years. The reason, she says, is he was so good at compensating for his deficits. 'How do you recognize a face?' she asked. 'For most people, this is a silly question. You just do. But people who have prosopagnosia can tell you exactly why they recognize a person. Thomas consciously looks for the details that others notice unconsciously.' Dr. Thomas Gruter's experience in this respect is typical of people with face blindness. They develop alternate strategies for identifying people —they remember their clothes, manners, gait, hairstyle. or voice, and by using such techniques, many can compensate quite well. 'Until very recently, not remembering faces was not considered to be a medical condition,' Dr. Thomas Gruter said. 'It was not even known to most physicians as such. The term 'prosopagnosia' was not taught to students of medicine or psychology.' Most people 'would consider it a bad habit,' he said, 'much like forgetting the names of people you are introduced to, or being unable to find your way around town.' Dr. Martina Gruter said many considered her husband and his father, who is also face blind, to be simply 'absent-minded professors' who occasionally may net recognize someone because they are preoccupied with higher thoughts. People with face blindness can typically understand facially expressed emotions --they know whether a face is happy or sad, angry or puzzled. They can detect subtle facial cues, determine gender and even agree with everyone else about which faces are attractive and which are not. In other words, they see the face clearly, they just do not know whose face they are looking at, and cannot remember it once they stop looking. Even familiar faces can be unrecognizable. Dr. Sellers, for example, said she could summon no picture in her mind of her own mother's face. Dr. Sellers discovered her own problem only a year ago, at the age of 40. She was doing research for a novel involving a character with schizophrenia. 'I kept coming across the term 'face recognition',' she said. 'It kept ringing a bell, although the phenomenon is quite different for people with schizophrenia. But once I had the term, I searched for it on the Internet. The minute I knew the concept of face blindness existed, I knew I had it.' The phenomenon has been investigated with functional MRI brain scans, a form. of imaging that shows in real time which parts of the brain are active, and it is known that a part of the brain called the fusiform. gyms responds much more
A.
To remember the name of a TV show she has seen.
B.
To retell the plot of a novel she has read.
C.
To recall the address of her friends.
D.
To pick out her sister in a group photo.
拍照语音搜题,微信中搜索"皮皮学"使用
参考答案:
参考解析:
知识点:
.
..
皮皮学刷刷变学霸
举一反三
【多选题】中医学术体系的形成时期标志性的经典有哪些?
A.
《 黄帝内经 》
B.
《 黄帝八十一难经 》
C.
《 神农本草经 》
D.
《 伤寒杂病论 》
【多选题】AutoCAD 2008中提供的精确制图辅助工具有()。
A.
捕捉和栅格
B.
极轴追踪
C.
对象捕捉和对象捕捉追踪
D.
动态输入
E.
正交功能
【单选题】在气相色谱法中,死时间为1分钟,某组分的保留时间为5分钟,其调整保留时间为
A.
1分钟
B.
2分钟
C.
3分钟
D.
4分钟
E.
5分钟
【简答题】行为主义学习理论认为知识积累的关键因素是 —— 以及两者之间的联系。学习就是通过强化建立刺激与反应之间的联结。
【单选题】在气相色谱法中,死时间为1min,某组分的保留时间为5min,它的调整保留时间为
A.
1min
B.
2min
C.
3min
D.
4min
E.
5min
【多选题】AutoCAD 中提供的精确制图辅助工具有( )。
A.
捕捉和栅格
B.
极轴追踪和正交
C.
动态输入
D.
对象捕捉
E.
对象捕捉追踪
【判断题】行为主义学习理论认为行为的习得是刺激与反应联结的形成
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】在气相色谱法中,某组分的保留时间为5min,空气的保留时间为1min,某组分的调整保留时间为
A.
1min
B.
2min
C.
3min
D.
4min
E.
5min
【多选题】AutoCAD 中提供的精确制图辅助工具有( )。
A.
捕捉和栅格
B.
极轴追踪和正交
C.
对象捕捉
D.
动态输入
E.
对象捕捉追踪
【多选题】AutoCAD 2008中提供的精确制图辅助工具有()。
A.
捕捉和栅格
B.
极轴追踪和正交
C.
对象捕捉
D.
对象捕捉追踪
E.
动态输入
相关题目: