1. Paragraph 2 ___.
2. Paragraph 3____.
3. Paragraph 4 ___.
4. Paragraph 5 ___.
A ways of departure from immature and simplistic impressions
B. comment on first impression
C. illustration of first impression
D. comparing incoming sensory information against memories
E threatening aspect of first impressions
D differences among Jocks(骗子), Geeks(反常人) and Freaks(怪人)
5. Sensory information is one that is received through ____.
6. You interpret ___by comparing it against the memories already stored in your brain.
7. The way we stereotype people is a less mature form of thinking, which is similar to __.
8. We can use our mature style of thinking thanks to ___.
A a stranger’s less mature type of thinking
B. the most complex areas of our cortex
C. The immature form of thinking of a very young people
D. the meaning of incoming sensory information
E. the sights and sounds of the world
F. an opportunity to analyze different forms of thinking
l 答案及解析
1. 文章标题分析:How we form first impression
We all have first impression of someone we just met. But why? Why do we form an opinion about someone without really knowing anything about him or her
从上面的结构可以知道“第一印象”就是我们对别人形成的最初的观点或看法。
2.小标题分析:抓住被选项中的核心词/特征词
A ways of departure from immature and simplistic impressions
B. comment on first impression
C. illustration of first impression
D. comparing incoming sensory information against memories
E threatening aspect of first impressions
F differences among Jocks(骗子), Geeks(反常人) and Freaks(怪人)
2. 直接解题
A ways of departure from immature and simplistic impressions
B. comment on first impression
C. illustration of first impression
D. comparing incoming sensory information against memories
E threatening aspect of first impressions
F differences among Jocks(骗子), Geeks(反常人) and Freaks(怪人)
1 Paragraph 2 ___.
The answer is related to how your brain allows you to be aware of the world. Your brain is so sensitive in picking up facial traits, even very minor difference in a how a person’s eyes, ears, nose, or mouth are placed in relation to each other make you see him or her as different. In fact, your brain continuously processes incoming sensory information – the sights and sounds of your world. Theses incoming “signals” are compared against a host of “memories” stored in the brain areas called the cortex (大脑皮层)system to determine what these new signals “mean”.
责任编辑:wangpeng6151