单选题     'Does my smile look big in this?' Future fitting-room mirrors in clothing stores could subtly adjust your reflection to make you look—and hence feel—happier, encouraging you to like what you see.
    That's the idea behind the Emotion Evoking System developed by Shigeo Yoshida and colleagues at the University of Tokyo in Japan. The system can manipulate your emotions and personal preferences by presenting you with an image of your own smiling or frowning face.
    The principle that physiological (生理的) changes can drive emotional ones—that laughter comes before happiness, rather than the other way around—is a well-established idea.
    The researchers wanted to see if this idea could be used to build a computer system that manipulates how you feel. The system works by presenting the user with a webcam (网络摄像头) image of his or her face—as if they were looking in a mirror. The image is then subtly altered with software, turning the comers of the mouth up or down and changing the area around the eyes, so that the person appears to smile or frown.
    Without telling them the aim of the study, the team recruited 21 volunteers and asked them to sit in front of the screen while performing an unrelated task. When the task was complete the participants rated how they felt. When the faces on screen appeared to smile, people reported that they felt happier. Conversely, when the image was given a sad expression, they reported feeling less happy.
    Yoshida and his colleagues tested whether manipulating the volunteers' emotional state would influence their preferences. Each person was given a scarf to wear and again presented with the altered webcam image. The volunteers that saw themselves smiling while wearing the scarf were more likely to report that they liked it, and those that saw themselves not smiling were less likely.
    The system could be used to manipulate consumers' impressions of products, say the researchers. For example, mirrors in clothing-store fitting rooms could be replaced with screens showing altered reflections. They also suggest people may be more likely to find clothes attractive if they see themselves looking happy while trying them on.
    'It's certainly an interesting area,' says Chris Creed at the University of Birmingham, UK. But he notes that using such technology in a shop would be harder than in the lab, because people will use a wide range of expressions. 'Attempting to make slight differences to these and ensuring that the reflected image looks believable would be much more challenging,' he says.
    Of course, there are also important ethical questions surrounding such subtly manipulative technology. 'You could argue that if it makes people happy what harm is it doing?' says Creed. 'But I can imagine that many people may feel manipulated, uncomfortable and cheated if they found out.'
单选题     What's the main purpose of the Emotion Evoking System? ______
 
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】事实细节题。第2段指出该系统试图通过改变你看到的自己的表情来影响你的情绪和个人偏好。故选A。
单选题     What can we learn about the webcam image in the study? ______
 
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】事实细节题。第4段指出网络摄像头的图像要让志愿者感觉他们在照镜子,即让他们相信看到的图像,而这个图像是被修改了的。由此可见这只是一种假象。故选B。
单选题     What would probably happen if the researchers' suggestions were to be taken? ______
 
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】推理引申题。第7段指出研究者们认为这项技术能改变消费者对于产品的印象,喜欢上试穿的衣服,由此可以推出这项技术如果被采用的话,可以让人们进行更多地消费。故选C。
单选题     What does Creed mention as a limitation of the technology? ______
 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】事实细节题。第8段克里德指出在商店很难采用这项技术,原因在于人们的表情太过丰富。由此可见这项技术的局限性是只能处理相对简单的表情。故选D。
单选题     What does Creed's comment on the ethical issues with this technology imply? ______
 
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】推理引申题。第9段克里德提出这项技术虽然可以让人快乐,但也可以让人产生被操控感,不安和被欺骗感。由此可见人们认为自由意志高于一切。故选B。