GRE阅读常见问题选项错误点分析.doc

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1、GRE阅读常见问题选项错误点分析 GRE阅读常见问题选项错误点分析 ,提升判断力秒选正确项,我们一起来看看吧,下面就和大家分享,来欣赏一下吧。GRE阅读常见问题选项错误点分析 提升判断力秒选正确项GRE阅读常见问题选项错误情况分析GRE阅读中存在的误导选项主要有以下几类:1. 偏题选项这类选项比较隐蔽,其表现形式往往是内容本身是正确的,但说偏了没抓住重点,不是*的主线。考生很容易跟正确选项混淆而选择它。不同于未提及项,这类选项在文中是有所涉及的,因此也更具有欺骗性,考生需要先明确题目所问问题才能避免被偏题项干扰思路。2. 反义选项有些题目本身比较长,加上一些否定和双重否定等,考生就容易理解错误

2、,而特别设置的部分反义项,就往往会等着考生自己被绕晕了以后自投罗网。这些选项的特点是和其它选项的意思完全相反,乍看之下非常显眼,但实际上却并非正确答案。建议大家仔细读题,把反义否定等关系搞清楚再解答。3. 错位选项还有些错误选项,主题和修饰错位,或者把不相关的内容拼凑在一起,看似哪边都沾一点关系,其实本身却是错位选项,也很容易影响考生的判断。这种选项同样具有很强的干扰性,可能选项中部分选取了*内容,但之后引导出的结论却和*完全没有关系,也是考验大家对于*细节记忆能力的干扰项,最好的应对方法是阅读过程中多做标记定位,解题时适当参考就可以避免错位混淆。4. 极端选项极端项其实是比较明显的错误干扰选

3、项,常会使用一些代表主观判断的最高级词汇比如best/most/least,唯一性词汇比如only、alone或者比较级词汇比如better、worse等。这些选项表现出一种极端的不容否定的态度。看似很有道理其实却并正确。这类选项由于标志明显,所以熟悉套路以后反而很容易发现,考生也会主动去注意那些极端词汇,稍加留意就不会中招了。5. 未提选项这种错误选项陷阱也比较常见,故意给出一些看似很有联系的新信息点,说得头头是道,考生如果因为*篇幅较长没有阅读全文,就会以为自己没看仔细,其实这些所谓的信息都是一些根本没有出现在*中完全和题目无关的未提及选项。这类选项同样很好辨认,看似涉及到了细节,但实际上

4、并没有在*中提到,大家面对阅读要学会根据*所提内容进行选择,千万不要自己想当然,只要能做到这点,那么这种类型的干扰错误选项就无用武之地了。6. 主观选项这种错误选项的制定思路是根据一些常识性的推断,引导考生做出的判断,其本身带有很强的主观性,而并不是客观的事实,如果考生不加注意就很容易被带歪思路。类似上文的未提项,这类主观项同样是建立在看似迎合实则错误引导考生思路的做法上的。大家在阅读过程中应学会以*内容为主,不要想当然地去结合自己的经历经验进行联想。脚踏实地才能做好这类题目。明确认识GRE阅读错误选项危害性有助提分之所以要特别列出阅读中的错误选项,是因为这种选项对于考生阅读部分的正确率杀伤率

5、极高。比起其它一目了然的数学或者填空题,GRE阅读要解题首先就要读*,很多考生读完*,特别是长篇*后,本身思路已经有些混乱,再被这些干扰选项祸害一下,很容易就会出现连续错误。而许多考生对于GRE阅读存在的畏惧情绪和心理阴影,其实也往往是由错误选项导致的。总而言之,GRE阅读中的难点不少,而其中来自选项的干扰无疑是最需要考生引起警惕的问题。希望通过上文盘点介绍,各位考生能够认清这些误导选项,在考试中更准确地发现并排除它们,进而提升解题速度和正确率。新GRE阅读长难句中译英练习41. The most thrilling explanation is, unfortunately, a littl

6、e defective. Some economists argue that powerful structural changes in the world have upended the old economic models that were based upon the historical link between growth and inflation.42. The Aswan Dam, for example, stopped the Nile flooding but deprived Egypt of the fertile silt that floods lef

7、t-all in return for a giant reservoir of disease which is now so full of silt that it barely generates electricity.43. New ways of organizing the workplace-all that re-engineering and downsizing-are only one contribution to the overall productivity of an economy, which is driven by many other factor

8、s such as joint investment in equipment and machinery, new technology, and investment in education and training.44. His colleague, Michael Beer, says that far too many companies have applied re-engineering in a mechanistic fashion, chopping out costs without giving sufficient thought to long-term pr

9、ofitability.45. Defenders of science have also voiced their concerns at meetings such as The Flight from Science and Reason , held in New York City in 1995, and Science in the Age of (Mis) information, which assembled last June near Buffalo.41.参考译文很不幸,这最令人震惊的解释有一点缺陷。一些经济学家认为世界经济结构的强有力的变化已经结束了那个以经济增长

10、和通货膨胀的历史关联为基础的旧的经济模式。42.参考译文例如,阿斯旺大坝使得尼罗河不再洪水泛滥,但是它也夺去了埃及以前所享有的洪水留下的肥沃淤泥-这些换宋的就是这么个疾病滋生的水库,现在这个水库积满了淤泥,几乎不能发电了。43.参考译文企业重组的新方法-所有那些重新设计、缩小规模的做法-只是对一个经济的整体生产力做出了一方面的贡献。这种经济还受许多其他因素的驱动,比如结合设备和机械上的投资、新技术,以及在教育和培训上的投资。44.参考译文他的同事迈克尔比尔说,有太多的公司已经用一种机械的方式实行公司内部的重新设计,在没有充分考虑长期赢利的能力下削减了成本。45.参考译文科学卫士们在会议上也表述

11、了他们的关注,比如1995年在纽约市举行的 “逃离科学与理性会议,以及去年6 月在布法罗附近召开的(错误)信息时代的科学”会议。GRE阅读练习每日一篇A Marxist sociologist has argued that racism stems from the class struggle that is unique to the capitalist systemthat racial prejudice is generated by capitalists as a means of controlling workers. His thesis works relativel

12、y well when applied to discrimination against Blacks in the United States, but his definition of racial prejudice as “racially-based negative prejudgments against a group generally accepted as a race in any given region of ethnic competition,” can be interpreted as also including hostility toward su

13、ch ethnic groups as the Chinese in California and the Jews in medieval Europe. However, since prejudice against these latter peoples was not inspired by capitalists, he has to reason that such antagonisms were not really based on race. He disposes thusly (albeit unconvincingly) of (to get rid of “ho

14、w to dispose of toxic waste”) both the intolerance faced by Jews before the rise of capitalism and the early twentieth-century discrimination against Oriental people in California, which, inconveniently, was instigated by workers.17. The passage supplies information that would answer which of the fo

15、llowing questions?(A) What accounts for the prejudice against the Jews in medieval Europe?(B) What conditions caused the discrimination against Oriental people in California in the early twentieth century?(C) Which groups are not in ethnic competition with each other in the United States?(D) What ex

16、planation did the Marxist sociologist give for the existence of racial prejudice?(E) What evidence did the Marxist sociologist provide to support his thesis?18. The author considers the Marxist sociologists thesis about the origins of racial prejudice to be(A) unoriginal(B) unpersuasive(C) offensive

17、(D) obscure(E) speculative19. It can be inferred from the passage that the Marxist sociologist would argue that in a noncapitalist society racial prejudice would be(A) pervasive(B) tolerated(C) ignored(D) forbidden(E) nonexistent20. According to the passage, the Marxist sociologists chain of reasoni

18、ng required him to assert that prejudice toward Oriental people in California was(A) directed primarily against the Chinese(B) similar in origin to prejudice against the Jews(C) understood by Oriental people as ethnic competition(D) provoked by workers(E) nonracial in characterBy 1950, the results o

19、f attempts to relate brain processes to mental experience appeared rather discouraging. Such variations in size, shape, chemistry, conduction speed, excitation threshold, and the like as had been demonstrated in nerve cells remained negligible in significance for any possible correlation with the ma

20、nifold dimensions of mental experience.Near the turn of the century, it had been suggested by Hering that different modes of sensation, such as pain, taste, and color, might be correlated with the discharge of specific kinds of nervous energy. However, subsequently developed methods of recording and

21、 analyzing nerve potentials failed to reveal any such qualitative diversity. It was possible to demonstrate by other methods refined structural differences among neuron types; however, proof was lacking that the quality of the impulse or its condition was influenced by these differences, which seeme

22、d instead to influence the developmental patterning of the neural circuits. Although qualitative variance among nerve energies was never rigidly disproved, the doctrine was generally abandoned in favor of the opposing view, namely, that nerve impulses are essentially homogeneous in quality and are t

23、ransmitted as “common currency” throughout the nervous system. According to this theory, it is not the quality of the sensory nerve (sensory nerve: 感觉神经) impulses that determines the diverse conscious sensations they produce, but rather the different areas of the brain into which they discharge, and

24、 there is some evidence for this view. In one experiment, when an electric stimulus was applied to a given sensory field of the cerebral cortex of a conscious human subject, it produced a sensation of the appropriate modality (modality: n.形式, 形态, 特征) for that particular locus, that is, a visual sens

25、ation from the visual cortex, an auditory sensation from the auditory cortex, and so on. Other experiments revealed slight variations in the size, number, arrangement, and interconnection of the nerve cells, but as far as psychoneural correlations were concerned, the obvious similarities of these se

26、nsory fields to each other seemed much more remarkable than any of the minute differences.However, cortical locus, in itself, turned out to have little explanatory value. Studies showed that sensations as diverse as those of red, black, green, and white, or touch, cold, warmth, movement, pain, postu

27、re, and pressure apparently may arise through activation of the same cortical areas. What seemed to remain was some kind of differential patterning effects in the brain excitation: it is the difference in the central distribution of impulses that counts. In short, brain theory suggested a correlatio

28、n between mental experience and the activity of relatively homogeneous nerve-cell units conducting essentially homogeneous impulses through homogeneous cerebral tissue. To match the multiple dimensions of mental experience psychologists could only point to a limitless variation in the spatiotemporal

29、 patterning of nerve impulses.21. The author suggests that, by 1950, attempts to correlate mental experience with brain processes would probably have been viewed with(A) indignation(B) impatience(C) pessimism(D) indifference(E) defiance22. The author mentions “common currency” in line 26 primarily i

30、n order to emphasize the(A) lack of differentiation among nerve impulses in human beings(B) similarity of the sensations that all human beings experience(C) similarities in the views of scientists who have studied the human nervous system(D) continuous passage of nerve impulses through the nervous s

31、ystem(E) recurrent questioning by scientists of an accepted explanation about the nervous system23. The description in lines 32-38 of an experiment in which electric stimuli were applied to different sensory fields of the cerebral cortex tends to support the theory that(A) the simple presence of dif

32、ferent cortical areas cannot account for the diversity of mental experience(B) variation in spatiotemporal patterning of nerve impulses correlates with variation in subjective experience(C) nerve impulses are essentially homogeneous and are relatively unaffected as they travel through the nervous sy

33、stem(D) the mental experiences produced by sensory nerve impulses are determined by the cortical area activated(E) variation in neuron types affects the quality of nerve impulses24. According to the passage, some evidence exists that the area of the cortex activated by a sensory stimulus determines

34、which of the following?I. The nature of the nerve impulseII. The modality of the sensory experienceIII. Qualitative differences within a modality(A) II only(B) III only(C) I and II only(D) II and III only(E) I, II and III25. The passage can most accurately be described as a discussion concerning his

35、torical views of the(A) anatomy of the brain(B) manner in which nerve impulses are conducted(C) significance of different cortical areas in mental experience(D) mechanics of sense perception(E) physiological correlates of mental experience26. Which of the following best summarizes the authors opinio

36、n of the suggestion that different areas of the brain determine perceptions produced by sensory nerve impulses?(A) It is a plausible explanation, but it has not been completely proved.(B) It is the best explanation of brain processes currently available.(C) It is disproved by the fact that the vario

37、us areas of the brain are physiologically very similar.(D) There is some evidence to support it, but it fails to explain the diversity of mental experience.(E) There is experimental evidence that confirms its correctness.27. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following exhibit the LEAST qualitative variation?(A) Nerve cells(B) Nerve impulses(C) Cortical areas(D) Spatial patterns of nerve impulses(E) Temporal patterns of nerve impulses答案:17-27:DBEECADAEDBGRE阅读常见问题选项错误点分析

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