医学博士英语统考新大纲样卷的阅读理解及答案。新大纲阅读理解题型不变,还是六篇,分值不变,1 分 1 题,共 30 题。 ?5" >5 0
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新大纲的来源是国家医学考试中心编写、人民卫生出版社出版的《全国医学博士外语统一考试指南》(2020 版)。国家医学考试中心是全国医学博士英语统考的命题方。 ,eebO~7vB
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注意:该大纲是全国统考卷的大纲,并不适用于英语自主命题卷的院校。 CPa+?__B
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2020 医学博士英语统考样卷阅读理解题 VKXi*F9
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Part IV Reading Comprehension q@1A2L\Om
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Directions: In this part there are six passages, each of which is followed by five questions. For each question there are four possible answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer, and then mark the letter of your choice on the ANSWEK SHEET. $hJ 4=F
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Passage One #\F8(lZ
There is plenty we don't know about criminal behavior. Most crime goes unreported so it I hard to pick out trends from the data, and even reliable sets of statistics can be difficult to compare. But here is one thing we do know: those with a biological predisposition to violent behavior who are brought up in abusive homes are very likely to become lifelong criminals. (
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Antisocial and criminal behavior tends to run in families, but no one was sure whether this was due mostly to social-environmental factors or biological ones.It turns out both are important, but the effect is most dramatic when they act together. This has been illustrated in several studies over the past six years which found that male victims of child abuse are several times as likely to become criminals and abusers themselves if they were born with a less-active version of a gene for the enzyme monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) , which breaks down neurotransmitters crucial to the regulation of aggression. Qmd2C&Xw
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Researchers recently made another key observation: kids with this "double whammy" of predisposition and an unfortunate upbringing are likely to show signs of what's to come at a very early age. The risk factors for long-term criminality-attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, low IQ, language difficulties-can be spotted in kindergarten. So given what we now know, shouldn't we be doing everything to protect the children most at risk? z,qNuv"W
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No one is suggesting testing all boys to see which variant of the MAO-A gene they have, but what the science is telling us is that we should redouble efforts to tackle abusive upbringing, and even simple neglect. This will help any child, but especially those whose biology makes them vulnerable. Thankfully there is already considerable enthusiasm in both the US and the UK for converting the latest in behavioral science into parenting and social skills: both governments have schemes in place to improve parenting in families where children are at risk of receiving poor care. y#ON=8l
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Some people are uncomfortable with the idea of early intervention because it implies our behavior becomes "set" as we grow up, compromising the idea of free will. That view is understandable, but it would be negligent to ignore what the studies are telling us. Indeed, the cost to society of failing to intervene-in terms of criminal damage, dealing with offenders and helping victims of crime-is bound to be greater than the cost of improving parenting. The value to the children is immeasurable. BH^cR<<j
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61. It seems that researchers try to explain violent behavior ______. }q /[\3
A. in terms of physical environment huin?,eGz
B. from a biological perspective sYTToanA$?
C. based on the empirical data FP6JfI8
D. in a strictly statistical way Q!fk|D+j
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62. When we say that antisocial and criminal behavior tends to run in families, we mean that ______. Mb%[Qp60
A. a particular gene may be passed on in families su=]gE@
B. child abuse will lead to domestic violence U%2{PbL
C. the male victims of child abuse will pass on the tendency 1 rmN)
D. the violent predisposition is closely related to child abuse ^[
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63. Based on the recent observation, what should be done to check the development of antisocial and criminal behavior? `\-mqe
A. Boys should be screened for the biological predisposition. 6}mSA@4&
B. High-risk kids should be brought up in kindergarten. ukXKUYNm8
C. Genes for the risk factors should be accurately determined. A%#."2vq~
D. Active measures ought to be taken at an early age. 6FI`0j=~
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64. What does the author emphasize in defending early intervention? W QyMM@#
A. The immeasurable value of furthering the current research. *7/MeE6)i
B. The consequences of compromising democracy. WG*S:_?
C. The relatively easy solution to improving parenting skills. `lq[6[n
D. The greater cost of failing to tackle the known issue. []eZO_o6j
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65. Which of the following can be the best title for the passage? Uv/?/;si
A. Parenting Strategies for Kids. $t$YdleIH
B. The Making of a Criminal. `BZX\LPHm
C. The Importance of Parental Education. <)9E .h
D. Abusive Parents and Criminal Children. lilF _y
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Passage Two t12 xPtN1
A looming doctor shortage threatens to create a national healthcare crisis by further limiting access to physicians, jeopardizing quality and accelerating cost increases. j*)
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"People are waiting weeks for appointments; emergency departments have lines out the door," said a spokesman for a national physician search firm." Doctors are working longer hours than they want. They are having a hard time taking vacations, a hard time getting their patients in to specialists." eMC0
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Experts say these are symptoms of a wider problem: Demand for doctors is accelerating more rapidly than supply. X>y6-%@
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The number of medical school graduates has remained virtually flat for a quarter-century, because the schools limited enrollment out of concern that the nation was producing too many doctors.
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But demand has exploded, driven by population gains, a healthy economy and a technology- driven boom in physicians' repertoires, which now include such procedures as joint replacement and liposuction. Pa!r*(M)C
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Over the next 15 years, aging baby boomers will push urologists, geriatricians and other physicians into overdrive. Their cloudy eyes alone, one study found, could boost the demand for cataract surgery by 47%. W=T}hA#`
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Yet much of the physician workforce also is graying, and headed for the door. A third of the nation's 750,000 active post-residency physicians are older than 55 and likely to retire as the boomer generation moves into its time of greatest medical need.
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By 2025, physicians are expected to hang up their stethoscopes at a rate of 22,000 a year, up from 9,000 in 2005. That is only slightly less than the number of doctors who completed their training last year. ~^Y(f'{
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At the same time, younger male physicians and women-who constitute half of all medical students-are less inclined to work the slavish hours that long typified the profession. $iA`_H`W
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As a result, the next generation of physicians is expected to be 10% less productive, Edward Salsberg, the director of the Association of American Medical Colleges' Center for Workforce Studies, told a congressional committee in May. |h,aV(Q
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66. The passage begins by saying that a doctor shortage ______. *zy0,{bl
A. is becoming a problem threatening the nation's health care &OiJJl[9
B. is a national problem that has been there for some time UUx0#D/U0C
C. is so serious that healthcare quality has suffered *HwTq[y
D. has expressed itself gradually in several states m3k}Q3&6Z
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67. Which of the following is NOT mentioned as a cause of the problem? $zTjh~ 9
A. There is now a bigger population than before. !5}Ibb
B. The generally favorable economic situation has pushed the needs. P(W7,GD,k
C. There has been a huge cut in the healthcare funding. rBP!RSl1
D. There are many new procedures that did not exist before. $o`N%
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68. Why haven't the medical schools trained more students? $H/3t? 6h`
A. There were already too many doctors just a few years ago. *N$#cz
B. The medical schools lack the capacity to do so. ,2)LH'Xx
C. Interest in the medical profession has declined. Ftm%@S ?
D. The increased needs were not expected. Gt[!q\^?
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69. The imbalance between supply and demand will be worsened because ________. ?0+D1w
A. residency training may take longer to complete 2Ni$
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B. old-age medical problems will boost the needs dramatically :JSOj@s
C. many doctors may find it hard to master the new technologies p~28?lYv
D.many doctors who remain active have passed the retirement age vcAs!ls+
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70. The passage implies that ________. 7vV3"uns
A. doctors of the older generation typically work harder ;t@zH+*}
B. young doctors work more efficiently than the older doctors 0vUX^<
C. female doctors can hardly do the same work as the male doctors j ij:}.d6
D. new doctors emphasize productivity rather than the hours they put in ;*+jCL2F
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Passage Three `w]=xe
Archaeology can tell us plenty about how humans looked and the way they lived tens of thousands of years ago. But what about the deeper questions? Could early humans speak, were they capable of self-conscious reflection, did they believe in anything? jGd{*4{3+
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Such questions might seem to be beyond the scope of science. Not so. Answering them is the focus of a burgeoning field that brings together archaeology and neuroscience. It aims to chart the development of human cognitive powers. This is not easy to do. A skull gives no indication of whether its owner was capable of speech, for example. The task then is to find proxies (替代物) for key traits and behaviors that have stayed intact over millennia. 1Af~6jz
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Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of this endeavor is teasing out the role of culture as a force in the evolution of our mental skills. For decades, development of the brain has been seen as exclusively biological. But increasingly, that is being challenged. j|KZ HH%dc
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Take what the Cambridge archaeologist Colin Renfrew calls "the sapient (智人的) paradox." Evidence suggests that the human genome, and hence the brain, has changed little in the past 60,000 years. Yet it wasn't until about 10,000 years ago that profound changes took place in human behavior: people settled in villages and built shrines. Renfrew's paradox is why, if the hardware was in place,did it take so long for humans to start changing the world? $)mE"4FE
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His answer is that the software-the culture-took a long time to develop. In particular, the intervening time saw humans attach meaning to objects and symbols. Those meanings were developed by social interaction over successive generations, passed on through teaching, and in the neuronal connections of children. ! SD?
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Culture also changes biology by modifying natural selection, sometimes in surprising ways. How is it, for example, that a human gene for making essential vitamin C became blocked by junk DNA? One answer is that our ancestors started eating fruit, so the pressure to make vitamin C "relaxed" and the gene became unnecessary. By this reasoning, early humans then became addicted to fruit, and any gene that helped them to find it was selected for. Ej
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Our understanding of human cognitive development is still fragmented and confused. We have lots of proposed causes and effects, and hypotheses to explain them. Yet the potential pay-off makes answers worth searching for. If we know where the human mind came from and what changed it, perhaps we can gauge where it is going. Finding those answers will take all the ingenuity the modern human mind can muster. &n6mXFF#>P
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71. The questions presented in the first paragraph ________. 1[a;2xA~
A. are raised to explore the evolution of human appearance ~a4htj
B. have no possible scientific answers whatever v}IkY
C. are not scientific enough to be answered here ?3Se=7
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D. are intended to dig for ancient human minds YL=?N k/
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72. According to the passage, where do some scientists try to find the force in the development of mental power? (01M 0b#
A. The intriguing role of culture. ~#&bDot
B. The conitinuous passage of time. 3lqR(Hh3
C. The fascinating structure of a skull. .%h.b6^
D. The evolutionary force inherent in the brain.
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73. According to Renfrew, the transition of the human mental skills from 60,000 to 10,000 years ago suggests that ________. :t8(w>oW
A. human civilization would come sooner or later +#}I
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B. it took a long time for the culture to play its role suN
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C. the human brain remained biologically static early on {v}f/cu
D. the interaction between gene and environment was slow but sure 8xs[{?|:
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74. From the example illustrating the relation between culture and biology, we might conclude that ________. DF-`nD
A. the mental development has not been exclusively biological 5vj;lJKcd`
B. natural selection is mostly independent of human behavior TggM/@k
C. the brain and culture have not developed at the same pace $(H%|Oyn
D. vitamin C contributes to the development of the brain [h+MA>%!
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75. Speaking of the human mind, the author would say that ________. !5wm9I!5^
A. Its cognitive development is extremely slow `$\g8Mo
B. to know its past is to understand its future \?{nP6=
C. its biological evolution is hard to predict .$y}}/{j?[
D. as the brain develops, so does the mind Mdsn"Y V
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Passage Four <RS@,
Stephanie Smith, a children's dance instructor, thought she had a stomach virus. The aches and cramping were tolerable that first day. Then her diarrhea turned bloody. Her kidneys shut down. Seizures knocked her unconscious. When she emerged, she could no longer walk. The affliction had ravaged her nervous system and left her paralyzed from the waist down. vyP3]+n
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