如何在20分钟内出色完成雅思阅读

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常常有同学抱怨说雅思阅读考试时间太短,最后几道题根本来不及看就只能靠蒙了。今天小编给大家带来了教你20分钟内出色完成雅思阅读,希望能够帮助到大家,下面小编就和大家分享,来欣赏一下吧。

克服时间障碍 教你20分钟内出色完成雅思阅读

雅思阅读似乎天生就是用来刁难人的:近1000字的学术文章,不认识的单词,需要细细比对的题目……而这一切都要在二十分钟内完成。因此,很多雅思考生抱怨雅思阅读完成时间不够,或者匆匆忙忙做完了正确率太低。实际上,雅思阅读虽然文章长,题目多,但是在二十分钟内做完并且有一个可观的正确率,是完全可以达到的标准。

雅思阅读的时间不够主要源于两个方面:一是文章太长,二是题目涉及的信息点位置分散。对于第一个问题,需要在平时的备考过程中加强训练。这里面主要有两个问题,一是阅读速度慢,二是生单词阻碍了阅读的进度。阅读速度慢的问题只有通过大量阅读来解决。实际上,如果每天给自己一个规定的时间,在这一时间内要求自己必须完成一定字数的阅读,这样天天练习,阅读速度慢慢就会提高。很多时候,阅读的速度不够快和大脑接受英语信息的速度有关系,当大脑需要将英语翻译成汉语才能接受的时候,速度自然就慢了。因此,就需要平时养成英语的思维习惯,比较可行的办法是自己在心里对着自己说话,碰到任何一件有意思的事情,就在心里默默地用英语描述。除此以外,也可以找一份与雅思阅读难度相当的英语材料,每天大声快速的朗读,以此来训练自己快速接受英语信息的能力。应对生单词,则要有两手准备:一是平时阅读的时候多积累单词、看见不认识的单词,当时就记录下来并且反复复习;二是在考试中如果遇到了生词,不要慌张,一般而言都不影响理解,将它当作一个认识的单词就好,或者直接跳过去也未尝不可。但是有时会有关键词不认识的情况,所以,解决这个问题根本还是在平日的积累。

关于题目涉及信息分散的问题,主要通过做题技巧来弥补。通过浏览文章之后,我们在心里应该对文章什么部分讲什么有了一个大概的印象。这种“印象”是做题速度的根本保证。在这个基础上,要掌握一些基本的技巧。首先,雅思的阅读题的顺序通常是与文章相对应的,就是说,前面的题目对应文章的前几段,后面的题目对应文章的后几段,有一定的对应关系,这样,在寻找信息的时候就更能有的放矢,不至于满篇乱找。其次,雅思的阅读题中,比较容易出问题的可能是判断题和段落信息匹配题。判断题要坚持一个基本原则,那就是文章中没有提到的坚决是NOT  GIVEN。中国人的思维习惯,认为有所提及,但是没有说到,应该判断为错(FALSE或者NO),但是,在雅思考试当中,就算文章所说内容与题目有关,但没有出现关键词,也不能认为对。例如2010年9月11日雅思A类考试第三篇文章,判断题中说行星上面可能有水,原文说的是行星被氢气层所环绕。看起来二者相关,但是答案应该是NOT  GIVEN,因为并没有提到跟水有关的东西,而题目所陈述的是跟水相关的情况。至于段落信息匹配题,就一定要找出关键词,并和原文进行比对。对于相似的信息,就需要在信息之间首先加以比较,找出分歧的地方,再到文章中去找。这样,就能很容易地找出信息所在段落了。

雅思阅读机经真题解析-What Does the Consumer think?

What Does the Consumer think?

A

MARKETING  people are no longer prepared to take your word for it that you favour one  product over another. They want to scan your brain to see which one you really  prefer. Using the tools of neuroscientists, such as electroencephalogram (EEG)  mapping and functional magnetic-resonance imaging (fMRI), they are trying to  learn more about the mental, processes behind purchasing decisions. The  resulting fusion of neuroscience and marketing is inevitably, being called  'neuromarketing'.

B

The  first person to apply brain-imaging technology in this way was Gerry Zaltman of  Harvard University, in the late 1990s. The idea remained in obscurity until  2001, when BrightHouse, a marketing consultancy based in Atlanta, Georgia, set  up a dedicated neuromarketing arm, BrightHouse Neurostrategies Group.  (BrightHouse lists Coca- Cola, Delta Airlines and Home Depot among its clients.)  But the company's name may itself simply be an example of clever marketing.  BrightHouse does not scan people while showing them specific products or  campaign ideas, but bases its work on the results of more general fMRI-based  research into consumer preferences and decision-making carried out  at Emory  University in Atlanta.

C

Can  brain scanning really be applied to marketing? The basic principle is not that  different from focus groups and other traditional forms of market research. A  volunteer lies in an fMRI machine and is shown images or video clips. In place  of an interview or questionnaire, the subject's response is evaluated by  monitoring brain activity. fMRI provides real-time images of brain activity, in  which different areas 'light up' depending on the level of blood flow. This  provides clues to the subject's subconscious thought patterns. Neuroscientists  know, for example, that the sense of self is associated with an area of the  brain known as the medial prefrontal cortex. A flow of blood to that area while  the subject is looking at a particular logo suggests that he or she identifies  with that brand.

D

At  first, it seemed that only companies in Europe were prepared to admit that they  used neuromarketing. Two carmakers, DaimlerChrysler in Germany and Ford's  European arm, ran pilot studies in 2003. But more recently, American companies  have become more open about their use of neuromarketing. Lieberman Research  Worldwide, a marketing firm based in Los Angeles, is collaborating with  the California Institute of  Technology (Caltech) to enable movie studios to market- test  film trailers. More controversially, the New York Times recently reported that a  political consultancy, FKF Research, has been studying the effectiveness of  campaign commercials using neuromarketing techniques.

E

Whether  all this is any more than a modem-day version of phrenology, the Victorian  obsession with linking lumps and bumps in the skull to personality traits, is  unclear. There have been no large-scale studies, so scans of a handful of  subjects may not be a reliable guide to consumer behaviour in general. Of  course, focus groups and surveys are flawed too: strong personalities can steer  the outcomes of focus groups, and some people may be untruthful in their  responses to opinion pollsters. And even honest people cannot always explain  their preferences.

F

That  is perhaps where neuromarketing has the most potential. When asked about cola  drinks, most people claim to have a favourite brand, but cannot say why they  prefer that brand's taste. An unpublished study of attitudes towards two well-  known cola drinks, Brand A and Brand B, carried out last year in a college of  medicine in the US found that most subjects preferred Brand B in a blind testing  — fMRI scanning showed that drinking Brand B lit up a region called the ventral  putamen, which is one of the brain's reward centres, far more brightly than  Brand A. But when told which drink was which, most subjects said they preferred  Brand A, which suggests that its stronger brand outweighs the more pleasant  taste of the other drink.

G

People  form many unconscious attitudes that are obviously beyond traditional methods  that utilise introspection, says Steven Quartz, a neuroscientist at Caltech who  is collaborating with Lieberman Research. With over 100 billion dollars spent  each year on marketing in America alone, any firm that can more accurately  analyse how customers respond to brands could make a  fortune.

H

Consumer  advocates are wary. Gary Ruskin of Commercial Alert, a lobby group,  thinks existing marketing techniques are powerful enough. "Already, marketing is  deeply implicated in many serious pathologies", he says. 'That is especially  true of children, who are suffering from an epidemic of marketing-related  diseases, including obesity and type-2 diabetes. Neuromarketing is a tool to  amplify these trends.' Dr. Quartz counters that neuromarketing techniques could  equally be used for benign purposes. 'There are ways to utilise these  technologies to create more responsible advertising, he says. Brain- scanning  could, for example, be used to determine when people are capable of making free  choices, to ensure that advertising falls within those  bounds.

I

Another  worry is that brain-scanning is an invasion of privacy and that information on  the preferences of specific individuals will be misused. But neuromarketing  studies rely on small numbers of volunteer subjects, so that seems implausible.  Critics also object to the use of medical equipment for frivolous rather than  medical purposes. But as Tim Ambler, a neuromarketing researcher at the London  Business School, says, 'A tool is a tool, and if the owner of the tool gets a  decent rent for hiring it out, then that subsidises the cost of the equipment,  and everybody wins.' Perhaps more brain-scanning will some day explain why some  people like the idea of neuromarketing, but others do  not.

Questions 14-19

Reading Passage 2 has ten paragraphs A-J.

Choose the correct heading for Paragraphs B-G from the list of headings

below. Write the correct number (i-x) in boxes 14-19 on your answer  sheet

List of Heading

i. A description of the procedure and mechanism

ii. An international research project

iii. An experiment to investigate consumer responses

iv. Marketing with an alternative name

v. A misleading name for business?

vi. A potentially profitable line of research

vii. Medical dangers of the technique

viii. Internal drawbacks to marketing tools

ix. Broadening applications

x. What is neuromarketing?

Example Paragraph A

14 Paragraph B

15 Paragraph C

16 Paragraph D

17 Paragraph E

18 Paragraph F

19 Paragraph G

Questions 20-22

Look at the following people (Questions 20-22) and the list of opinions  below. Match each person with the opinion credited to him.

Write the correct letter A-Fin boxes 20-22 on your answer sheet.

20 Steven Quartz

21 Gary Ruskin

22 Tim Ambler

List  of opinions

A  Neuromarketing could be used to contribute towards the cost of medical  technology

B  Neuromarketing could use introspection as a tool in marketing  research.

C   Neuromarketing could be a means of treating medical problems.

D  Neuromarketing could make an existing problem worse.

E   Neuromarketing could lead to the misuse of medical equipment.

F   Neuromarketing could be used to prevent the exploitation of  consumers

Questions 23-26

Complete the summary below using words from the passage.

Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet.

Neuromarketing can provide valuable information on attitudes to particular  23 It may be more reliable than surveys, where people can be 24 , or focus  groups, where they may be influenced by others. It also allows researchers to  identify the subject's 25 thought patterns. However, some people are concerned  that it could lead to problems such as an increase in disease among 26

文章题目:What Does the Consumer think ?

篇章结构

体裁

议论

题目

What  Does the Consumer think ?

结构

(一句话概括每段大意)

介绍一种用大脑去观察产品喜好的方法

一个B小组应用F  MRI去获得信息

怎么从F  MRI中获得信息去了一个例子

从之前只有小部分接受到美国大多数人都接受了

同样的他会有一些瑕疵

举例说明有的结果和人们说的不一样

neuroscientists通过精确的分析获得了很多对象

两人对科学技术的不同观点

两种不同定义日后有可能利用这种科技知道为什么会有不同的意见

试题分析

Question 1-。。。

题目类型:

题号

定位词

文中对应点

题目解析

14

V

B段

B段中说BrightHouse 营销公司成立了神经学营销小组,然而该公司的名字显示它并没有扫描人的想法,仅仅是聪明营销的例子,因此选V

15

i

C段

C段描述了大脑扫描的原理和过程,所以选i

16

ix

D段

D段主要说了从起初只有欧洲的公司利用神经学营销,到现在美国的公司也开始着手,说明了神经营销的应用范围领域变广,故选择ix

17

viii

E段

E段说了市场调查方法中存在的一些缺陷,例如接受测试的人太少不足以得出正确的结果等等。因此选择viiii.

18

iii

F段

F段主要说了神经学营销的一个例子——消费者对于两种不同可乐饮料的反馈。 所以选iii.

19

vi

G段

G段说人们对于产品的态度很多都是无意识的。如果能够准确地分析出消费者是如何选择商品的,这将会带来巨大的利益。因此选vi.

20

f

G段

People  form many unconscious attitudes that are obviously beyond traditional methods  that utilise introspection,says Steven Quartz, a neuroscientist at Caltech who  is collaborating with Lieberman Research.

21

d

H段

Consumer  advocates are wary. Gary Ruskin of Commercial Alert, a lobby

group,  thinks existing marketing techniques are powerful  enough.

22

a

I段

But  as Tim Ambler, a neuromarketing researcher at the London Business School, says,  'A tool is a tool, and if the owner of the tool gets a decent rent for hiring it  out, then that subsidises the cost of the equipment, and everybody  wins

23

brands/logo

C段

A  flow of blood to that area while the subject is looking at a particular logo  suggests that he or she identifies with that brand.

24

Untruthful

A段

They  want to scan your brain to see which one you really  prefer.

25

Unconcious  /subconscious

C段

This  provides dues to the subject’s  subconscious thought patterns.

26

Children

H段

'Already,  marketing is deeply implicated in many serious pathologies", he says. 'That is  especially true of children, who are suffering from an epidemic of  marketing-related diseases, including obesity and type-2  diabetes.

参考译文:

消费者在想什么

A

当你说,喜欢一个产品胜过另一个,营销人不再愿意相信你的话,他们想扫描你的大脑来看看你更喜欢哪个(产品)。神经科学家开始使用此类工具,如脑电图(EEG映射和功能性核磁共振成像(fMRI);他们正试图了解更多关于购买决定背后的心理过程。这样,祌经科学和营销的融合是不可避免的,被称为“神经学营销”。

B

在这个领域第一个应用脑成像技术的是哈佛大学的格里Zaltman(1990年代后期)。这种想法曾经一直默默无闻,直到2001年,坐落在乔治亚州的亚特兰大BrightHouse营销咨询公司成立了一个专门的神经学营销的部门。(BrightHouse在他的客户中选择了可口可乐,三角洲航空公司和家得宝研究。)但从该公司的名字(BrightHouse  Neurostrategies集团)看,它可能本身仅仅是聪明营销一个例子。当给人们特定的产品或活动的时候,BrightHouse的研究没有去扫描人的想法,而仅仅(借用或)建立在亚特兰大埃默里大学进行的基于功能核磁共振成像研究消费者的偏好和决策的一般结果。

C

大脑扫描能真正被应用到营销?其实基本原理和其他传统市场研究的焦点和形式并无区别。一个志愿者躺在功能磁共振机和机器显示图像或视频剪辑。不过通过监测评估主体大脑活动的反应来代替一个采访或问卷。功能磁共振成像的大脑活动提供了实时图像,不同地区“点亮“取决于血液水平的流动。这提供了主体侧的潜意识思维模式的线索。神经科学家知道,例如,自我感知的是与大脑称为内侧前前额皮层的区域相关。流向该区域的血液,是測试对象他或她认同这个品牌的一个特定的信号标志。

D

起初,似乎只有欧洲的公司准备承认他们使用神经学营销。两家汽车制造商,德国戴姆勒克莱斯勒和福特的欧洲的子机构,于2003年开始试点研究。但最近,美国公司对于他们使用神经营销学已经变得更加开放。利伯曼的研究(一个总部位于洛杉矶,与加州理工学院合作的营销公司)在世界范围内进行电影制片市场研究——他们测试电影预告片。更有争议的是,《纽约时报》最近报道,政治咨询公司FKF,已经研究竞选广告中使用神经学营销技术的有效性。

E

是否所有这些超出现代版的颅相学-关于维多利亚的痴迷点和头骨个性疙瘩的链接块特征的-的范畴尚不淸楚。因为没有大规模的研究,所以扫描少数受试者可能不是一个消费者行为可靠的一般性指导。当然,焦点小组和问卷调查也存在缺陷:个性强烈的人可以引导关注群体全体的结果;存些民意调查专家们关注群体的反应也可能是不真实的。甚至是诚实的人也不能总是说清楚他们的偏好。

F

这也许是在祌经学营销就最有潜力的领域。当被问及可乐碳酸饮料品牌时,大多数人声称有一个最喜欢的品牌,但不能说出他们为什么喜欢这个品牌。去年,在美国一个医学院进行的关于两个著名的可乐饮料(品牌A和品牌B)消费者态度未发表的研究发现:在盲品测试fMRI扫描时,按照扫描结果,大多数调查对象首选品牌应该是B,饮用品牌B在消费者脑部叫做腹侧核的区域(这是大脑的“奖赏中心”)比品牌A更明亮。但是当告诉这些饮料是哪个,大多数的实验对象说他们更喜欢品牌A,这表明其强大的品牌效应甚至大于其他饮料实际更加愉快的味道。

G

利伯曼研究的合作者,加州理工学院的神经学家Steven  Quartz说:人们的态度是来源许多意识的情形,这显然是超出传统的利用内省的方法。仅在美国在营销的花费超过每年一千亿美元,任何可以更准确地分析客户如何选择品牌的公司都可能会发财。

H

消费者保护团体则持谨慎态度。一个游说团体Gary  Ruskin of Commercial Alert认为,“现有的营销技术是足够强大,消费者已经深陷其中产生很多流行的病理症状。市场营销中的孩子尤其如此,受害的孩子已产生相关疾病,包括肥胖和2型糖尿病。而神经营销学正是放大这些趋势的一个工具。”但是神经营销学Quartz博士反驳说,技术同样可以用于良性的目的。“人们有办法利用这些技术来创建更负责任的广告,例如大脑-扫描可以被用于划定广告的界限来确保人们能够做出自由选择”。

I

另一个担心是,大脑扫描是一种侵犯隐私行为,这些特定个人的喜好信息会被滥用。但神经营销学的研究依赖于少量的志愿受试者,所以,这似乎有些令人难以有可行性。批评家们也反对医疗设备用于非医学目的“琐碎轻佻的”研究。但伦敦商学院的神经营销学研究员Tim  Ambler说,“工具仅是工具,如果(医疗)工具的主人出租这工具取得不错的租金,用于资助的设备的费用,那么人人都是赢家。他还调侃,“也许有一天(医疗)设备对更多的大脑扫描还能解释为什么有些人喜欢神经营销学这个主意,但其他人却不喜欢。”

参考答案:

Version         17101 主题 消费者的思维

14

v

15

i

16

ix

17

viii

18

iii

19

vi

20

F

21

D

22

A

23

brand(s)/logo

24

untruthful

25

unconscious/

subconscious

26

children



如何在20分钟内出色完成雅思阅读

常常有同学抱怨说雅思阅读考试时间太短,最后几道题根本来不及看就只能靠蒙了。今天小编给大家带来了教你20分钟内出色完成雅思阅?
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