电子科技大学
2016年攻读硕士学位研究生入学考试试题
考试科目:288 单独考试英语
注:无机读卡,所有答案必须写在答题纸上,写在试卷或草稿纸上均无效。
一.Reading Comprehension (50 points)
Section A Directions: Read the following four passages. Answer the questions below each one by choosing A), B), C), or D). Write your answers on the ANSWER SHEET.
Passage 12020年国考行测真题
What you can remember from age 3 may help improve aspects of your life far into adulthood.
Children who have the ability to recall and make sense of memories from daily life — the first day
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of preschool, the time the cat died — can use them to better develop a sense of identity, form
relationships and make sound choices in adolescence and adulthood, new research shows.
While the lives of many youngsters today are heavily documented in photos and video on social
media an d stored in families’ digital archives, studies suggest photos and videos have little impact.
Parents play a bigger role in helping determine not just how many early memories children can recall,
but how children interpret and learn from the events of their earliest experiences.
“Our personal memories define who we are. They bond us together,” says Robyn Fivush, a
普通话二级乙等有用吗中国注册会计师登录入口psychology professor at Emory University in Atlanta and an author of dozens of the topic. Children
whose parents encourage recalling and storytelling about daily events show better coping and
省考公务员啥时候报名problem-solving skills by their preteens, and fewer symptoms of depression, research shows.
Some memories help build a sense of self-continuity, or personal identity, says a 2011 study.
People recall these mem ories when they “want to feel that I am the same person that I was before”,
or “when I want to understand how I have changed from who I was before”. A hurricane survivor,
for example, might recall the memory as proof that she can survive tough experiences and grow
stronger as a result.
Other memories serve a directive function, and guide behavior. People recall these when
making decisions or to avoid repeating past mistakes. A person whose dog was killed by a car is
likely to call on the memory when deciding to keep pets on a leash.
A third type, social-bounding memories, involving relationships with others. People recall these
when they want to strengthen relationships or form new ties, the study says. A college student who
participated in a different study cited bedtime-sessions with his father, who read him the entire Lord
of the Rings Trilogy, as a motivator to build and maintain strong family ties in his adult life.
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