Suppose you are there in the museum, with the head-sized smartphone permanently positioned in front of your nose. According to a

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问题    Suppose you are there in the museum, with the head-sized smartphone permanently positioned in front of your nose. According to a new study published in Psychological Science this week, you are doing it all wrong. That tiny camera you are using to carefully【C1】______your art viewing experience is actually【C2】______your art memory, not preserving it.
   The study,【C3】______by Fairfield University’s psychological scientist Linda Henkel, claims that museum goers have worse memories【C4】______objects and specific object details【C5】______they used a camera to record paintings, archeological relics or historical artifacts【C6】______It’s a phenomenon
   Henkel calls the "photo-taking impairment effect. "
   " When people【C7】______technology to remember for them — counting on the camera to record the event and thus not needing to【C8】______to it fully themselves — it can have a negative【C9】______on how well they remember their experiences," Henkel explains in a description of the study.
   To reach her conclusion, Henkel【C10】______an experiment at Bellarmine Art Museum at Fairfield University,【C11】______she recruited undergraduate students to【C12】______the institute and take note of specific objects on display. The subjects could either photograph the items or just observe them — it was【C13】______them. Then the following day, the students’ memories were tested.
   The results proved that the camera-happy participants【C14】______worse than the persons who relied on their simple observation skills.
   "Research has suggested that the sheer【C15】______and lack of organization of digital photos for personal memories discourages many people from accessing and reminiscing about them," Henkel states.
【C4】

选项 A、to
B、in
C、for
D、by

答案C

解析 本题考查介词的使用及固定搭配。“have a memory for(of)sth.”表示对某事的记忆。
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