阅读理解 New scientific studies reveal the hidden costs of multitasking as technology increasingly tempts people to do more than one thing at a time. Whether people toggle between browsing the Web and using other computer programs, talk on cell phones while driving, pilot jumbo jets or monitor air traffic, they're using their "executive control" processes—the mental CEO—found to be associated with the brain's key neural regions. These interrelated cognitive processes establish priorities among tasks and allocate the mind's resources to them. "People have specific mental resources whose effective use requires supervision through executive mental control," says David Meyer, PhD. at the University of Michigan.
To better understand executive control, as well as the human capacity for multitasking and its limitations, Joshua Rubinstein, PhD. of U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, and David Meyer, studied patterns in the amounts of time lost when people switched repeatedly between two tasks of varying complexity and familiarity. The findings revealed that for all types of tasks, subjects lost time when they had to switch from one task to another, and time costs increased with the complexity of the tasks, so it took a significantly long time to switch between more complex tasks. Time costs were a lot greater when subjects switched to tasks that were relatively unfamiliar. They got "up to speed" faster when they switched to tasks they knew better, an observation that may lead to interfaces designed to help overcome people's innate cognitive limitations.
The researchers say their results suggest that executive control involves two distinct, complementary stages: goal shifting ("I want to do this now instead of that") and rule activation (I'm turning off the rules for that and turning on the rules for this"). Both stages help people unconsciously switch between tasks. Rule activation itself takes significant amounts of time, several tenths of a second—which can add up when people switch back and forth repeatedly between tasks. Thus, multitasking may seem more efficient on the surface, but may actually take more time in the end. According to the researchers, this insight into executive control may help people choose strategies that maximize their efficiency when multitasking. The insight may also weigh against multitasking. For example, Meyer points out, a mere half second of time lost to task switching can mean the difference between life and death for a driver using a cell phone, because during the time that the car is not totally under control, it can travel far enough to crash into obstacles that the driver might have otherwise avoided.
单选题 36.According to the text, mental CEO is to______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】文章第一段将“行政控制”比作大脑的首席执行官。第一段最后一句指出,特定精神资源的有效运用需要行政精神控制的监督,故选项[C]正确。选项[D]不全面,“行政控制”除了将任务进行排序外,还将脑部资源分配给它们。
单选题 37.Which of the following will generate the greatest time cost?
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】文章第二段谈到David Meyer和其他两位研究人员的研究结果,测量表明在所有类型的任务中,调查对象从一个任务转向另外一个任务时都会丢失一些时间,而且丢失的时间会随任务复杂程度的提高而增多。因此,在比较复杂的任务间进行转换时要花费很多时间。而当调查对象从一个任务转向另外一个相对不熟悉的任务时丢失的时间更多。故本题正确答案为[A]。
单选题 38.Which of the following statements is TRUE for the rule activation stage of executive control?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】文章第三段指出,行政控制涉及两个明显而互补的阶段:目标转换和规则启用。这两个阶段帮助人们无意识地进行任务转化。其中,规则启用阶段本身要占用较大比例的时间,大概十分之几秒。当人们在不同任务间不停地进行转换时,这一阶段所占用的时间就会越积越多。故本题的正确答案为[C],即“有助于解释任务转换过程中的时间丢失问题”。
单选题 39.The example about the driver in Paragraph 3 is used to illustrate that______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】文章第三段倒数第二句指出,对于行政控制的理解可能会反对人们同时处理多种任务。Meyer指出,人们在转换任务时丢失的半秒钟,对一个开车途中用手机的司机来说,有可能就意味着生与死的差别。故本题的正确答案为[B],即该例子是为了说明在某些情况下,为了安全应该避免同时处理多个任务。
单选题 40.What does the text mainly talk about?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】本篇文章主要讲述的是David Meyer和其他两位研究人员从大脑行政控制的角度来分析人们在处理多种任务时时间丢失问题的研究结果,故正确答案为[D],即任务转换过程中认知程序的行政控制。