A boy or a girl? That is usually the first question asked when a woman gives birth. Remarkably, the answer varies with where the

admin2022-07-19  32

问题     A boy or a girl? That is usually the first question asked when a woman gives birth. Remarkably, the answer varies with where the mother lives. In rich countries, the chances of its being a boy are about 5 % higher than in poor ones. Equally remarkably, that figure has been felling recently. Several theories have been put forward to explain these observations. Some argue that smoking plays a role; others hold that diet may be important. Neither of these ideas has been supported by evidence from large studies. But new research points to a different factor: stress.
    Early studies revealed a shift in women who became pregnant during floods and earthquakes and in time of war. Moreover, a study carried out eight years ago by researchers at the University of Aarhus, in Denmark, revealed that women who suffered the death of a child or spouse from some catastrophic illness around the time they conceived were much more likely to give birth to girls than to boys.
    Taken together, these results suggest that acute stress to a woman at the time of conception shifts the sex ratio towards girls. However, Carsten Obel, a researcher at Aarhus who was not involved in the earlier study, wondered if the same might be true of chronic stress too. In a paper just published in Human Development, he shows that it is.
    Dr. Obel used a set of data collected between 2012 and 2015. During that period 8,719 expectant mothers were asked to fill in questionnaires that inquired, among other things, about their level of stress. Dr. Obel found that the more stressed a mother had been, the less chance she had of having given birth to a boy. Only 47% of children born to women in the top quartile of stress were males. That compared with 52% for women in the bottom quartile. Dr. Obel suspects the immediate cause is that male pregnancies are more likely to miscarry in response to stress than female pregnancies are, especially during the first three months. However, that is difficult to prove. More intriguing, though, is the ultimate cause, for he thinks it might be adaptive, rather than pathological.
    That is because the chances are that a daughter who reaches adulthood will find a mate and thus produce grandchildren. A son is a different matter. Healthy, strapping sons are likely to produce lots of grandchildren, by several women—or would have done in the hunter-gatherer societies in which most human evolution took place. Weak ones would be marginalized and maybe even killed in the cut and thrust of male competition. If a mother’s stress adversely affects the development of her fetus then selectively aborting boys, rather than wasting time and resources on bringing them to term, would make evolutionary sense.
    That, in turn, would explain why women in rich countries, who are less likely to suffer from hunger and disease, are more likely to give birth to sons. That this likelihood is, nevertheless, falling suggests that rich women’s lives may be more stressful than they used to be.
From this passage, we may draw a conclusion that________.

选项 A、acute stress is more likely to cause women to choose aborting boys than chronic stress
B、stress to a woman at the time of conception will shift the sex ratio towards girls
C、more girls will be born in the future because of the increasing pressure
D、chronic stress is more decisive in influencing the women’s pregnancies

答案B

解析 本题没有关键词,是文章主旨题,需要总结各段主题:第一段:新的研究成果指出影响婴儿性别的另一个原因——压力。第二段:用研究来证明突发压力对于婴儿性别的影响。第三段:卡斯滕.奥贝尔想知道持续的压力是否也会影响婴儿性别。第四段:研究表明慢性压力的确会影响婴儿性别,但奥贝尔认为这是适应能力的体现。第五段:从进化论的角度解释压力导致女婴增加的说法是合理的。第六段:发达国家压力小,女性生男孩的几率大,而富裕的女性压力大,则容易生女孩。综上所述各段主题,本文主要讲述了压力对于婴儿出生性别的影响,分别用一些数据和研究证明急性压力(acute stress)和持续的压力(chronic stress)都会对婴儿性别造成一定的影响,由此可推断,压力会使得女孩的出生率高一些(shift the sex ratio towards girls),因此选项B概括全面,为正确答案。选项A、D均属于主观推导,因为原文第二至四段只交代了急性或持续的压力都会影响婴儿性别,但没有交代哪种压力的影响更大。选项C属于无中生有,原文并未提及,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/xfjRFFFM
0

最新回复(0)