It has long been the subject of speculation among the police and criminologists: what would happen if all the officers who now

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问题     It has long been the subject of speculation among the police  and criminologists: what would happen if all the officers who now spend so much of their time taking statements, profiling criminals and moving pieces of paper around were suddenly put on the streets? Crime figures released by London’s Metropolitan Police this week provide the best answer yet.
    Following the bombings of July 7th and 21st, thousands of police officers materialised on London’s pavements, many of them sporting brightly coloured jackets. Drawn from all over the city, they were assigned to guard potential targets such as railway stations. The police presence was especially heavy in the bombed boroughs: Camden (which was struck three times), Hammersmith and Fulham, Lambeth, Tower Hamlets, Westminster and the City of London.
    The show of force did not just scare off terrorists. There was less crime in July than in May or June, which is unusual: the warmer month tends to bring out criminal tendencies, as windows are left open and alcohol is imbibed alfresco. But the chilling effect was much stronger in the six boroughs that were targeted by terrorists. There, overall crime was down by 12% compared with July 2004.In inner London as a whole, crime fell by 6%. But in outer London, where the blue line was thinner, it went up slightly.
    Simon Foy, who tracks such trends at the Metropolitan Police, says that crime fell particularly steeply on the days of the attacks, partly because of the overwhelming police presence and partly because "even criminals were watching their televisions". What is significant is that crime barely rose thereafter. That was a change from the aftermath of September 11th 2001, when crime quickly soared just about everywhere—possibly because officers were deployed only in the very centre of London.
    "The received wisdom among criminologists is that marginal changes invisible patrolling have little or no effect on crime,"  says Mike Hough, a criminologist at King’s College London. July’s experiment should put that argument to rest. Even if offenders do not make rational calculations about the odds of being caught—which was low both before and after the bombings—they will be moved by a display of overwhelming force.
It can be inferred from the text that the crime occurrence may be associated with______.

选项 A、the trends which can be tracks
B、the deployment of the blue line
C、the overwhelming presence of criminals in London
D、the number of the days of terrorist attacks

答案B

解析 本题是一道细节题,测试考生准确理解原文信息的能力。本文的答案信息在第四段的最后两句,这两句话的大意是:“7月7日和21日伦敦爆炸案发生以后,犯罪率几乎没有上升。这是2001年9·11事件以后的一个变化。当时(9·11案件发生时)各地犯罪率迅速上升,大概原因是警察仅仅部署在伦敦的中心地区”。由此可以推断本题的正确选项是B“the deployment of the blue line”(警力的部署)。
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