首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
(1)How many times a day do you check your email? When you wake up? Before bed? A dozen times in between? If you’re like many of
(1)How many times a day do you check your email? When you wake up? Before bed? A dozen times in between? If you’re like many of
admin
2017-10-17
23
问题
(1)How many times a day do you check your email? When you wake up? Before bed? A dozen times in between? If you’re like many of us, the red blinking light of a BlackBerry is the first thing you see each morning—you’ve got mail!—and the last glimpse of color to fade out before bedtime. It’s constant and nagging—yet most of us say we can’t live without it. Add Twitter, Facebook, and the rest of our social-media obsessions to the mix, and the technology that was supposed to simplify our lives has become the ultimate time-suck: the average teen spends more than seven hours a day using technological devices, plus an additional hour just text-messaging friends.
(2)The advantage to all that gadgetry, of course, is connectedness: email lets us respond on the go, and we are in touch with more people during more hours of the day than at any other time in history. But is it possible we’re more lonely than ever, too? That’s what MIT professor Sherry Turkle observes in her new book, Alone Together, a fascinating portrait of our changing relationship with technology, the result of nearly 15 years of study. Turkle details the ways technology has redefined our perceptions of intimacy and solitude—and warns of the perils of embracing such virtual relationships in place of lasting emotional connections.
(3)Turkle talks to high-school students who fear having to make a phone call, and elementary-school children who become distraught when their toy robot pets "die." She wonders how her daughter will remember their relationship 40 years from now, if every long-distance communication between them happens via text message. But for Turkle, a psychologist by training, the biggest worry is what all this superficial engagement means for us developmentally. Is technology offering us the lives we want to live? "We’re texting people at a distance," says the author, the director of the MIT Initiative on Technology and Self. "We’re using inanimate objects to convince ourselves that even when we’re alone, we feel together. And then when we’re with each other, we put ourselves in situations where we are alone—constantly on our mobile devices. It’s what I call a perfect storm of confusion about what’s important in our human connections."
(4)What can’t be denied is that technology, no matter its faults, makes life a whole lot easier. It allows us to communicate with more people in less time; it can make conversation simple—no small talk required. It can be therapeutic: robots are now used to help care for the elderly; in Japan, they’re marketed as a way to lure addicts out of cyberspace. But it can also be seductive, providing more stimulation than our natural lives make possible. "The adrenaline (肾上腺素) rush is continual," Turkle says of our wired lives. "We get a little shot of dopamine(多巴胺) every time we make a connection." One high-school student she spoke with put it simply: "I start to have some happy feelings as soon as I start to text."
(5)But are any of those feelings equal to the kind we feel when engaged in real, face-to-face intimacy? Online, you can ignore others’ feelings. In a text message, you can avoid eye contact. A number of studies have found that this generation of teens is less empathetic than ever. That doesn’t spell disaster, says Turkle—but it does mean we might want to start thinking about the way we want to live. "We’ve gone through tremendously rapid change, and some of these things just need a little sorting out," she says. If she has her way, the dialogue will start here—and not just on somebody’s computer.
Turkle’s book is focused on discussing ______.
选项
A、the advantages and disadvantages of technology
B、how technology influences human relationships
C、our expectations on technology
D、our views on virtual relationships
答案
B
解析
第2段第3句中的our changing relationship with technology和第4句中的the ways technology has redefined our perceptions都表明Turkle的书主要讨论technology对人际关系的影响,因此,本题应选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/GtiMFFFM
0
专业英语四级
相关试题推荐
GraduationCeremoniesMayandJunearethemonthswhenmostAmericancollegesanduniversitiesholdtheircommencements./T
Accordingtodefenseofficials,thepurposeofthePentagoncreatingthespecialSupportBranchisto
Whichofthefollowinggroupsofpeoplecanjointhelibrary?
AccordingtoastudypublishedthisweekinthejournalEcologyLetters,thequantityofbirdsinEuropehasdeclinedbymoreth
UnderstandingTypesofPoemsI.EpicpoemsA.Definition:—anarrativeconcentratingon【T1】andeventsthataresignificant【T1】_
A、Makeitmorefrequentthanbefore.B、Lowerthecostofholdingit.C、Makepoorcountriesbecomethehostcountry.D、Reducethe
PartyTimeAmericansplanparties【T1】______.Asinothercultures,manyAmericansattendpartiesforweddingsand【T2】______.
Somemenseekoffice,nottobeusefultothestateandthegrassroots,butforthe______andfishes.
A、Beingsweet.B、Beingstraightforward.C、Beingsincere.D、Beinggenerous.D本题考查细节。由句(3)可知,女士建议男士要贴心、直接并且真诚,故排除A、B和C。因此答案为D。
Whenyouhavefinishedwiththatnovel,don’tforgettoreturnittoMark,______?
随机试题
A.单行B.相须C.相畏D.相恶E.相反表示减毒的配伍关系是
严重肺炎球菌肺炎可表现
腰椎间盘突出症的典型症状是
下列关于流动性风险的说法,错误的是()
下列关于股利分配的说法中,错误的是()。
对于SSB调制技术而言,以下说法不正确的是()。
A、 B、 C、 D、 B题干给出的五个图形均可看成由内外两部分组成,且图形之间的差异较大,而从数量上又找不出合适的规律,考虑图形的结构特征。内部图形分别位于外部图形的右、下、左、上,依次循环,由此选择B。
帝国主义之所以成为中国民族民主革命最主要的对象,是因为()
设总体X服从正态分布N(μ,σ2),X1,X2,…,X25是取自总体X的简单随机样本,为样本均值,若,则a=()。
如果该单位有一台需对外发布公共信息的Web服务器,应将其接入图2-32的哪个区域?如果电信部门分配的公网IP地址为202.117.12.32/30,则图2-32的网络连接应进行怎样的改动?
最新回复
(
0
)