填空题. A. identify B. original C. relevance D. accordingly E. precede F. revelation G. accessible H. unavailable I. regardless J. reportedly K. keep L. instead M. locate N. multiplication O. continually Inundated by more information than we can possibly hold in our heads, we're increasingly handing off the job of remembering to search engines and smart phones. Google is even 1 working on eyeglasses that could one day recognize faces and supply details about whoever you're looking at. But new research shows that outsourcing our memory—and expecting that information will be 2 and instantaneously available—is changing our cognitive habits. Experiments conducted by Betsy Sparrow, an assistant professor of psychology at Columbia University, 3 three new realities about how we process information in the Internet age. First, her experiments show that when we don't know the answer to a question, we now think about where we can find the nearest Web connection 4 of the subject of the question itself. A second 5 is that when we expect to be able to find information again later on, we don't remember it as well as when we think it might become 6 . And then there is the researchers' final observation: the expectation that we'll be able to 7 information down the line leads us to form a memory not of the fact itself but of where we'll be able to find it. But this handoff comes with a downside. Skills like critical thinking and analysis must develop in the context of facts: we need something to think and reason about, after all. And these facts can't be Googled as we go; they need to be stored in the 8 hard drive, our long-term memory. Especially in the case of children, "factual knowledge must 9 skill," says Daniel Willingham, a professor of psychology, at the University of Virginia-meaning that the days of drilling the 10 table and memorizing the names of the Presidents aren't over quite yet.