Professor Harris adapted a jealousy test commonly used on young children. Her research team conducted tests on 36 different dogs in their homes and videoed their reactions. The dogs' owner had to read a short passage from a book while petting a toy dog that wagged its tail and a Halloween lantern. Harris wanted to see how the dogs reacted to their owner petting the toy dog, as well as looking at if they had any reaction to the petting of the lantern. She noticed that the dogs were twice as likely to be jealous of the toy dog. A third of the dogs tried to muscle in between the toy and its owner. Professor Harris thinks it is important to understand jealousy more. She said: "Jealousy is the third-leading cause of non-accidental homicide across cultures."
a.Dog lovers have always known that dogs get jealous.T / F
b.A professor studied jealousy in dogs after observing her parents' dogs.T / F
c.A professor watched as two dogs try to bite her hand.T / F
d.The woman was stroking the dogs with one hand.T / F
e.Researchers used a test usually used with children on the dogs.T / F
f.Owners had to sing to their dog as part of the research.T / F
g.Dog owners tried to make their dog jealous by petting a lantern.T / F
h.Jealousy is the second biggest cause of non-accidental homicides.T / F
COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS
1.Since when have dog owners known that pets get jealous?
2.How many dogs did the professor's parents have?
3.How many dogs did the professor stroke?
4.What did two dogs try to do to the professor's hand?
5.What did the dogs want?
6.How many dogs were part of the tests?
7.What did the dogs have to listen to?
8.What happened to the tail of the toy dog?
9.What does professor Harris think is important?
10.What is jealousy the third-leading cause of?
答案
TRUE / FALSE
a T b T c F d F e T f F g T h F
COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS
1.Since time began
2.Three
3.Two
4.Knock it away
5.Maximum attention
6.36
7.A reading from a book
8.It wagged
9.Understanding jealousy
10.Non-accidental homicide