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《考研英語閱讀理解100篇 基礎(chǔ)版》第4章 科學(xué)研究類 Unit 46

所屬教程:考研英語閱讀

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2019年01月13日

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In a Cairo school basement,two dozen women analyze facial expressions on laptops,training the computers to recognize anger,sadness and frustration.At Cambridge University,an eerily realistic robotic head named Charles sits in a driving simulator,furrowing its brows,looking interested or confused.And in a handful of American middle school classrooms this fall,computers will monitor students’ emotions in an effort to track when they are losing interest and when they are getting excited about lessons.All three are examples of an emerging approach to technology called affective computing,which aims to give computers the ability to read users’ emotions,or“affect.” 
Yet until recently,our machines could not identify even seemingly simple emotions,like anger or frustration.The GPS device chirps happily even when the driver is ready to hurl it out the window.The online class keeps going even when half the students are lost in confusion.The airport security system can’t tell whether someone is behaving as if he were concealing something or is just anxious about flying. 
Technology that masters these skills could also help people who struggle to read the emotions of others,like those on the autism spectrum,or provide companionship and encouragement for nursing home residents.Without a grasp of emotions,some researchers argue,computers will never reach their full potential to support people. 
“Our digital world is for the most part devoid of rich ways of expressing our emotions,” said Rosalind Picard,director of the affective computing research group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab.She has been working for more than two decades to translate emotions into 1's and 0’s,the language of machines.One early project,with a collaborator,Rana el Kaliouby,was to design glasses for people with Asperger syndrome,a mild variant of autism,that warned them when they were boring someone. People with Asperger's often fixate on particular topics and find it hard to read the social cues,like yawning,fidgeting and looking away,that indicate the listener is bored. 
More recently,Dr.Picard and Dr.el Kaliouby have been developing software that maps 24 points on the face to intuit an emotion.In the past,computer algorithms have had trouble distinguishing among genuine smiles,smirks and the gritted teeth that come with frustration,Dr.el Kaliouby said,because they are often fleeting and result in only very small changes to the overall configuration of the face. 
注(1):本文選自The New York Times; 
注(2):本文習(xí)題模仿對象:本文習(xí)題的第1題模仿2009年真題Text 2的第1題;第2、4題模仿2010年真題Text 2的第2、3題;第3、5題模仿2011年真題Text 3第2題、Text 1的第5題。 
1.In paragraph 1,the text shows that ______. 
A) women analyze facial expressions on computer in a Cairo school basement 
B) computers will supervise students’ emotions to check their behavior in America 
C) a robot siting in a driving simulator looks interested or confused 
D) there emerges a new technology called affective computing 
2.Which of the following is true? 
A) The machines can tell simple personal moods. 
B) The GPS doesn’t function,so the driver throws it out of the window. 
C) The online class continues though 50% students can’t follow. 
D) The airport security system can identify passengers’ personal thoughts. 
3.According to the author,one of the distinctive functions of the technology is ______. 
A) to help people understand others’ inner feelings 
B) the residents in the nursing home feel encouraged and not isolated 
C) computers can’t help people without catching the emotions 
D) to endow people with rich ways to express their feelings 
4.The phrase“Asperger syndrome” (Line 5,Paragraph 4)most probably means ______. 
A) complicated feelings 
B) various emotions 
C) a kind of disease 
D) symptom 
5.From the text we can see that the writer seems ______. 
A) positive 
B) negative 
C) uncertain 
D) neutral 

在開羅一所學(xué)校的地下室里,20多名女性通過筆記本電腦來分析面部表情,訓(xùn)練計算機(jī)識別人類的憤怒、悲傷和沮喪。在劍橋大學(xué),有一個怪誕、逼真、名叫查爾斯的機(jī)器人坐在駕駛模擬器上,緊鎖雙眉,看起來時而興致沖沖,時而疑慮重重。今年秋天,在美國少數(shù)幾個中學(xué)教室里,將會安裝一些計算機(jī),以追蹤監(jiān)控學(xué)生們的情緒,看他們什么時候?qū)κ谡n內(nèi)容感興趣,什么時候不感興趣。以上三個例子都是一種新興的科學(xué)技術(shù)——情感計算技術(shù)的例子,其目的是為了賦予計算機(jī)讀取或者“影響”用戶情緒的能力。 
但到目前為止,我們的機(jī)器甚至還無法識別像憤怒或者沮喪這些看上去簡單的情緒。即使是司機(jī)把GPS扔到窗外的心都有了,它還仍然愉快地進(jìn)行著導(dǎo)航。即使有一半學(xué)生已經(jīng)困惑不已,在線課堂卻仍在繼續(xù)。機(jī)場安全系統(tǒng)也還無法分辨出一些人究竟是在隱藏什么非法勾當(dāng)還是只是著急趕飛機(jī)。 
掌握了這些技能的科技也能夠幫助那些不善于識別他人的情緒的人,比如自閉癥患者,或者給予養(yǎng)老院里的人以陪伴和鼓勵。一些研究人員認(rèn)為,不理解情緒,電腦將永遠(yuǎn)不會充分發(fā)揮它們幫助人類的潛力。 
麻省理工學(xué)院媒體實(shí)驗(yàn)室情感計算研究組主任羅莎琳德·皮卡德說:“我們這個數(shù)字化世界最缺乏的就是表達(dá)我們情緒的豐富多樣的方式。”在逾20年的研究中,皮卡德一直在探索如何將情緒翻譯為由1和0組成的計算機(jī)語言。在早期的一項研究中,她與合伙人拉娜·埃爾·卡利歐比共同為亞斯伯格綜合征患者設(shè)計了一款眼鏡,這種綜合征是孤獨(dú)癥的一種較輕的癥狀,戴這種眼鏡就可以提醒綜合征患者他們何時已經(jīng)使別人感到厭煩了?;歼@種病癥的人在談?wù)撃硞€話題時會滔滔不絕,而且很難明白社交暗示,比如傾聽者已經(jīng)開始打呵欠,坐立不安并且轉(zhuǎn)移視線,這些意味著傾聽者已經(jīng)厭倦了。 
最近,皮卡德博士和埃爾·卡利歐比博士一直在開發(fā)通過定位臉上24個點(diǎn)來判斷一個人的情緒的軟件。過去,計算機(jī)程序一直很難區(qū)別人們相似的面部動作,比如真實(shí)的微笑、假笑,以及因?yàn)榇煺鄱憩F(xiàn)出的咬牙切齒。埃爾·卡利歐比博士說,因?yàn)樗鼈兺寝D(zhuǎn)瞬即逝的,而且給整個面部結(jié)構(gòu)僅帶來非常微小的變化。 
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