单选题 When it comes to keeping your brain healthy—and working at its best—doctors have long advised patients to "use it or lose it." The idea is to keep the intellectual highways humming; if circuits aren"t used, they tend to deteriorate and eventually wither away, leading to dementia, and in some cases, Alzheimer"s. But new research provides a twist on this familiar advice—it turns out that some people benefit more from using it than others.
Psychiatrists led by Guy Potter at Duke University conducted a study of more than 1,000 male twins, most of whom were World War Ⅱ veterans. Potter collected 50-year-old data on the vets" IQ scores when they joined the Army, and then compared them to cognitive test scores the men generated after they retired from various jobs. He found that those who scored in the bottom quartile of the IQ scale when they were in their 20s, and then took on mentally challenging jobs, had the greatest gains on the cognitive tests in their 70s. "Being in a more complex job later in life helped them to develop skills they might not have had, or pushed them in ways so they were able to overcome their intellectual limitations," says Potter.
That means that those with the lowest cognitive abilities are most likely to lose it if they don"t use it, and also most likely to protect themselves from dementia and other cognitive problems by keeping their brain circuits active. Not surprisingly, the jobs that proved most beneficial to these folks include the higher degree professions such as law, medicine and journalism, but any career that required multi-tasking, organizing and managerial skill also boosted cognitive abilities later in life. Even being self-employed can qualify, since it requires considerable managerial and organizational skills.
While on the face of it, Potter"s study reinforces previous studies" findings about the importance of keeping brain circuits active, it is the first to tie it to the subjects" baseline intellectual ability. In other studies, researchers could never be sure, for instance, that people who remained intellectually active and therefore suffered fewer cases of dementia, didn"t have some sort of brain reserve, or start out with a higher level of cognitive ability that served as a buffer during their declining years.
Since Potter could use the IQ scores from early in life as a baseline, he showed that regardless of how much intellectual ability a person starts out with, a mentally demanding job can keep his brain healthy well into retirement. In fact, the gains for people who have high IQs are relatively small, leading Potter to speculate that having a complex job, "may make up for a lack of advantage early in life, whether they be socioeconomic or otherwise." he says. So depending on what you do for a living, that daily grind may actually be the ultimate brain booster.
单选题 The new research made by Guy Potter ______
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[解析] 从本文来看,Potter的发现并非是做脑力工作可以使人避免痴呆症等疾病,这是以前的研究早已证明的。他的新发现是:不管你起初智商如何,只要你事后长期从事mentally challenging jobs,那么你的认知技能就会获得较大幅度的提高,而那些原来智商高的人提高的幅度反而相对来说比较小(relatively small)。总之,第一段最后一句表达了Potter的基本观点。
B:第四段第一句提到,它reinforces previous studies" findings,但是,由于这项研究把研究的数据与被研究者20岁时的智商数据作了比较,它就能看出被研究者变老后认知技能提高的幅度。这是以前的研究没有做到的。
单选题 Which of the following contributes the least to the growth in intellectual ability?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[解析] 文章多处提到,多做动脑筋的工作(mentally challenging jobs, mentally demanding job或intellectually active)——不是单纯的体力劳动——才能使人的认知技能有所增益,使人患痴呆症的可行性变小。
单选题 Potter"s research is unique in that ______
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] 第二段提到,被研究者在70多岁接受认知测验,研究者将获得的分数同他们20岁时的智力测验分数相比较,目的是想看一看在其间的50年里,被研究者从事的工作类型对他们的智力技能有多大影响。结果发现,那些原来虽然智商不高,但事后能保持自己大脑活跃的人,其认知技能提高的幅度反而比那些起初智商高的人幅度更大。这一发现是这项新的研究不同于前人研究的地方。
单选题 Which of the following group of people have the greatest intelligence gain?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] 参阅以上各小题题解并参阅第二段。
单选题 We can conclude from the passage that ______
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[解析] 最后一段实际上是对Potter的发现做了一个总结。本文介绍了Potter的研究及其发现,总结起来就是:无论你起初智商如何,只要你长期做能使你的大脑保持活跃的工作,你的认知技能就能获得提高,你患痴呆症的可能性就小。