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READING Directions In the following article, some sentences have been removed. Choose the most suitable one from the choices listed from A to H to fit into each of the numbered gaps. There is ONE which does not fit in any of the gaps. How to be creative Creativity can seem like magic. We look at people like Steve Jobs and Bob Dylan, and we conclude that they must possess supernatural powers denied to mere mortals like us, gifts that allow them to imagine what has never existed before. They’re “creative type.” We’re not. 1 __________ Creativity is not a trait that we inherit in our genes or a blessing bestowed (赐予) by the angels. It’s a skill. Anyone can learn to be creative and to get better at it. New research is shedding light on what allows people to develop world-changing products and to solve the toughest problems. A surprisingly concrete set of lessons has emerged about what creativity is and how to spark it in ourselves and our work. 2 __________ The latest research suggests that this assumption is false. It turns out that we use “creativity” as a catchall (无所不包的) term for a variety of cognitive tools, each of which applies to particular sorts of problems and is coaxed to action in a particular way. The new research also suggests how best to approach the thorniest problems. We tend to assume that experts are the creative geniuses in their own fields. But big breakthroughs often depend on the naïve daring of outsiders. For prompting creativity, few things are as important as time devoted to cross-pollination (异花授粉) with fields outside our areas of expertise. Let’s start with the hardest problems, those challenges that at first blush seem impossible. Such problems are typically solved (if they are solved at all) in a moment of insight. Scientists have begun studying how insight occurs. 3 __________ For instance, exposing subjects to a short, humorous video – the scientists use a clip of Robin Williams doing stand-up – boosts the average success rate by about 20 percent. Alcohol also works. Earlier this year, researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago compared performance on insight puzzles between sober and intoxicated students. The scientists gave the subjects a battery of word problems known as remote associates, in which people have to find one additional word that goes with a triad of words. Here’s a sample problem: Pine Crab Sauce. In this case, the answer is “apple.” (The compound words are pineapple, crab apple, and apple sauce.) Drunk students solved nearly 30 percent more of these word problems than their sober peers. 4 __________ The answer involves the surprising advantage of not paying attention. Although we live in an age that worships focus – we are always forcing ourselves to concentrate – this approach can inhibit the imagination. We might be focused, but we’re probably focused on the wrong answer. And this is why relaxation helps: It isn’t until we’re soothed in the shower or distracted by the stand-up comic that we’re able to turn the spotlight of attention inward, eavesdropping on all those random associations unfolding in the far reaches of the brain’s right hemisphere. When we need an insight, those associations are often the source of the answer. This research also explains why so many major breakthroughs happen in the unlikeliest of places, whether it’s Archimedes in the bathtub or the physicist Richard Feynman scribbling equations in a strip club, as he was known to do. It reveals the wisdom of Google putting ping-pong tables in the lobby and confirms the practical benefits of daydreaming. As Einstein once declared, “Creativity is the residue (残留物) of time wasted.” Of course, not every creative challenge requires an epiphany (顿悟) ; a relaxing shower won’t solve every problem. Sometimes, we just need to keep on working, resisting the temptation of a beer-fuelled nap. There is nothing fun about this kind of creativity, which consists mostly of sweat and failure. It’s the red pen on the page and the discarded sketch, the trashed prototype and the failed first draft. Nietzsche referred to this as the “rejecting process,” nothing that while creators like to brag about their big epiphanies, their everyday reality was much less romantic. “All great artists and thinkers are great workers,” he wrote. But this raises an obvious question: If different kinds of creative problems benefit from different kind of creative thinking, how can we ensure that we’re rethinking in the right way at the right time? When should we daydream and go for a relaxing stroll, and when should we keep on sketching and toying with possibilities? 5 __________ Researchers call these intuitions “feelings of knowing,” and they occur when we suspect that we can find the answer, if only we keep on thinking. Numerous studies have demonstrated that, when it comes to problems that don’t require insights, the mind is remarkable adept (擅长的) at assessing the likelihood that a problem can be solved – knowing whether we’re getting “warmer” or not, without knowing the solution. This ability to calculate progress is an important part of the creative process. When we don’t feel that we’re getting closer to the answer – we’ve hit the wall, so to speak – we probably need an insight. If there is no feeling of knowing, the most productive thing we can do is forget about work for a while. But when those feelings of knowing are telling us that we’re getting close, we need to keep on struggling. 6 __________ They’re both just a matter of getting those answers out. Another kind of creative problem, though, is when you don’t have the right kind of raw material kicking around in your head. If you’re trying to be more creative, one of the most important things you can do is increase the volume and diversity of the information to which you are exposed. Steve Jobs famously declared that “creativity is just connecting things.” Although we think of inventors as dreaming up breakthroughs out of thin air, Mr. Jobs was pointing out that even the most far-fetched concepts are usually just new combinations of stuff that already exists. Under Mr. Jobs’ leadership, for instance, Apple didn't invent MP3 players or tablet computers – the company just made them better, adding design features that were new to the product category. Creativity is a spark. It can be excruciating (令人难以忍受的) when we’re rubbing two rocks together and getting nothing. And it can be intensely satisfying when the flame catches and a new idea sweeps around the world. For the first time in human history, it’s becoming possible to see how to throw off more sparks and how to make sure that more of them catch fire. And yet, we must also be honest: The creative process will never be easy, no matter how much we learn about it. Our inventions will always be shadowed by uncertainty, by the serendipity of brain cells making a new connection. Every creative story is different. 7 __________ ( 1,145 words ) A The good news is that the human mind has a surprising natural ability to assess the kind of creativity we need. B Yet every creative story is the same: There was nothing, now there is something – it’s almost like magic. C It’s this ability to attack problems as a beginner, to let go of all preconceptions, and fear of failure, that’s the key to creativity. D But creativity is not magic, and there’s no such thing as a creative type. E What explains the creative benefits of relaxation and booze? F Imagination was once thought to be a single thing, separate from other kinds of cognition. G Both moment-of-insight problems and nose-to-the-grindstone problems assume that we have the answers to the creative problems we’re trying to solve somewhere in our heads. H Interestingly, they have found that certain factors make people much more likely to have an insight, better able to detect the answers. 1 ________ 2 ________ 3 ________ 4 ________ 5 ________ 6 ________ 7 ________
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【单选题】Last month I booked a double room in the name of Mr. Brown for a week from the 14 th,January.
A.
上个月我以布朗先生的名义预订了一间双人房,为期一周,从1月14日起算。
B.
上个月14日我为布朗先生预订了一间房间,到现在已有一周时间了。
C.
上个月我为布朗先生预订了一个双人间,到1月14日止刚好为期一周.
D.
上个月,布朗先生为我预订了两个房间,到1月14日为止,共一周时间。
【单选题】根据古老的传说,有一个人曾经在大数目字上吃了亏,那就是印度的舍罕王。舍罕王打算重赏“象棋”的发明人和进贡者宰相西萨·班·达依尔。在这张棋盘的第一个小格内,赏给我一粒麦子;在第二个小格给两粒,第三格内给四粒......每一小格内都比前一小格加一倍。这样摆满棋盘上所有64格。请问需要多少麦子?( )
A.
这实际上是求首项为1,公比为2的等比数列的前64项的和:2的64次方减去1
B.
这实际上是等比数列1×2×……×64
C.
这实际上是10的64次方
D.
这实际上是等差数列1+2+……+64
【多选题】礼仪产生于( )。
A.
人类对神灵的祭祀活动
B.
统治阶级的编造
C.
人类群体生活的需要
D.
人类对自然现象的模仿
【判断题】“wheat”主要用于磨制面粉。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】听力原文: Last month I went to Manchester for a work meeting. I booked into a very nice hotel for two nights, and I was very happy with it. My room was beautiful, and the restaurant served very good food-...
A.
Disappointed.
B.
Satisfied.
C.
Angry.
【判断题】在间接标价法下,当外国货币的数量减少时,称外币贬值
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】“汇率”是用一种货币表示另一种货币的价格,其数值的大小要受到外汇市场上货币供需状况的影响,在间接标价法下,当外国货币数量减少时,则()。
A.
本国货币汇率上浮
B.
外国货币汇率下浮
C.
本币汇率下浮
【单选题】“汇率”是用一种货币表示另一种货币的价格,其数值的大小要受到外汇市场上货币供需状况的影响,在间接标价法下,当外国货币数量减少时,则( )。
A.
本国货币汇率上浮
B.
外国货币汇率下浮
C.
本币汇率下浮
D.
无法确定
【单选题】壮族三月三是备耕时期,吃( )预示五谷丰登之意。
A.
抓饭
B.
五色饭
C.
竹筒饭
D.
钵仔饭
【单选题】Last month I booked a double room in the name of Mr. Brown for a week from the 14 th , January.
A.
上个月我以布朗先生名义预定了一间双人房,为期一周,从 1 月 14 日 起算。 。
B.
上个月 14 日我为布朗先生预订了一间房间,到现在已有一周时间了。
C.
上个月我为布朗先生预订了一个双人间,到 1 月 14 日 止刚好为期一周。
D.
上个月,布朗先生为我预订了两个房间,到 1 月 14 日 为止,共一周时间
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