单选题 .  SECTION A MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS
    In this section there are three passages followed by ten multiple choice questions. For each multiple choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO.
    PASSAGE ONE
    (1)Life can be tough for immigrants in America. As a Romanian bank clerk in Atlanta puts it, to find a good job "you have to be like a wolf in the forest—able to smell out the best meat." And if you can't find work, don't expect the taxpayer to bail you out. Unlike in some European countries, it is extremely hard for an able-bodied immigrant to live off the state. A law passed in 1996 explicitly bars most immigrants, even those with legal status, from receiving almost any federal benefits.
    (2)That is one reason why America absorbs immigrants better than many other rich countries, according to a new study by the University of California. The researchers sought to measure the effect of immigration on the native-born in 20 rich countries, taking into account differences in skills between immigrants and natives, imperfect labor markets and the size of the welfare state in each country.
    (3)Their results offer ammunition for fans of more open borders In 19 out of 20 countries, the authors calculated that shutting the doors entirely to foreign workers would make the native-born worse off. Never mind what it would do to the immigrants themselves, who benefit far more than anyone else from being allowed to cross borders to find work.
    (4)The study also suggests that most countries could handle more immigration than they currently allow. In America, a one-percentage point increase in the proportion of immigrants in the population made the native-born 0.05% better off. The opposite was true in some countries with generous or ill-designed welfare states, however. A one-point rise in immigration made the native-born slightly worse off in Austria, Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland. In Belgium, immigrants who lose jobs can receive almost two-thirds of their most recent wage in state benefits, which must make the hunt for a new job less urgent.
    (5)None of these effects was large, but the study undermines the claim that immigrants steal jobs from natives or drag down their wages. Many immigrants take jobs that Americans do not want, the study finds. This "smooths" the labor market and ultimately creates more jobs for locals. Native-owned grocery stores do better business because there are immigrants to pick the fruit they sell. Indian computer scientists help American software firms expand. A previous study found that because immigrants typically earn less than locals with similar skills, they boost corporate profits, prompting companies to grow and hire more locals.
    PASSAGE TWO
    (1)There was something in the elderly woman's behavior that caught my eye. Although slow and unsure of step, the woman moved with deliberation, and there was no hesitation in her gestures. She was as good as anyone else, her movements suggested. And she had a job to do.
    (2)It was a few years ago, and I had taken a part-time holiday-season job in a video store at the local shopping mall. From inside the store, I'd begun to see the people rushing by outside in the mall's concourse as a river of humanity.
    (3)The elderly woman had walked into the store along with a younger woman who I guessed was her daughter. The daughter was displaying a serious case of impatience, rolling her eyes, huffing and sighing, checking her watch every few seconds. If she had possessed a leash, her mother would have been fastened to it as a means of tugging her along to keep step with the rush of other shoppers.
    (4)The older woman detached from the younger one and began to tick through the DVDs on the nearest shelf. After the slightest hesitation, I walked over and asked if I could help her find something. The woman smiled up at me and showed me a title scrawled on a crumpled piece of paper. The title was unusual and a bit obscure. Clearly a person looking for it knew a little about movies, about quality.
    (5)Rather than rushing off to locate the DVD for the woman, I asked her to walk with me so I could show her where she could find it. Looking back, I think I wanted to enjoy her company for a moment. Something about her deliberate movements reminded me of my own mother, who'd passed away the previous Christmas.
    (6)As we walked along the back of the store, I narrated its floor plan: old television shows, action movies, cartoons, science fiction. The woman seemed glad of the unrushed company and casual conversation.
    (7)We found the movie, and I complimented her on her choice. She smiled and told me it was one she'd enjoyed when she was her son's age and that she hoped he would enjoy it as much as she had. Maybe, she said with a hint of wistfulness, he could enjoy it with his own young children. Then, reluctantly, I had to return the elderly woman to her keeper, who was still tapping her foot at the front of the store.
    (8)I escorted the older woman to the queue at the cash register and then stepped back and lingered near the younger woman. When the older woman's turn in line came, she paid in cash, counting out the dollars and coins with the same sureness she'd displayed earlier.
    (9)As the cashier tucked the DVD into a plastic bag, I walked over to the younger woman.
    (10)"Is that your morn?" I asked.
    (11)I halfway expected her to tell me it was none of my business. But possibly believing me to be tolerant of her impatience, she rolled her eyes and said, "Yeah." There was exasperation in her reply, half sigh and half groan.
    (12)Still watching the mother, I said, "Mind some advice?"
    (13)"Sure," said the daughter.
    (14)I smiled to show her I wasn't criticizing. "Cherish her," I said. And then I answered her curious expression by saying, "When she's gone, it's the little moments that'll come back to you. Moments like this. I know."
    (15)It was true. I missed my mom still and remembered with melancholy clarity the moments when I'd used my impatience to make her life miserable.
    (16)The elderly woman moved with her deliberate slowness back to her daughter's custody. Together they made their way toward the store's exit. They stood there for a moment, side by side, watching the rush of the holiday current and for their place in it. Then the daughter glanced over and momentarily regarded her mother. And slowly, almost reluctantly, she placed her arm with apparently unaccustomed affection around her mother's shoulders and gently guided her back into the crowds.
    PASSAGE THREE
    (1)Reading award-winning literature may boost your ability to read other people, a new study suggests. Researchers at the New School for Social Research, in New York City, found that when they had volunteers read works of acclaimed "literary fiction", it seemed to temporarily improve their ability to interpret other people's emotions. The same was not true of nonfiction or "popular" fiction, the mystery, romance and science-fiction books that often dominate bestseller lists.
    (2)Experts said the findings, reported online in Science, suggest that literature might help people to be more perceptive and engaged in their lives.
    (3)"Reading literary fiction isn't just for passing the time It's not just an escape" said Keith Oatley, a professor emeritus of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto. "It also enables us to better understand others, and then take that into our daily lives."
    (4)Oatley was not involved in the new research, but worked on some of the first studies to suggest that reading literature can boost people's empathy for others. His team has found that those who read a lot of fiction tend to show greater empathy on standard tests, but the same is not true of avid nonfiction fans.
    (5)But, the study by Oatley and his team cannot prove that literature boosts empathy—empathetic folks may just be drawn to reading fiction, whereas the new study does offer some "cause-and-effect" evidence, Oatley said. For the study, researchers set up a series of five experiments in which participants read either literary fiction, popular fiction, nonfiction or nothing at all before taking some standard tests. One of the tests is known as "Reading the Mind in the Eyes". People have to look at photos of actors' eyes, and then guess what emotion is being expressed in each. The test is considered a measure of empathy. Overall, study participants fared better on the test after reading literary fiction, versus the other three conditions.
    (6)It was a small improvement, according to the principal researcher David Comer Kidd, "It's not like taking people from a (grade) 'C' to an 'A'," he said. But, Kidd added, the effect was seen after only about 10 minutes' reading, and it was a statistically strong finding, meaning it's unlikely to have been due to chance.
    (7)"Literary" fiction has no hard-and-fast definition. So Kidd and his colleagues chose contemporary works that have won or been finalists for outstanding literary awards. They included "The Round House", by Louise Erdrich, "Salvage the Bones", by Jesmyn Ward and the short story "Corrie" by Alice Munro. And "popular" fiction included best-sellers like "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn, and Danielle Steel's "The Sins of the Mother".
    (8)What's so special about literary fiction? "For one, it's usually more focused on characters than on plot," Kidd noted. But beyond that, he said, there is usually no single "authoritative narrator" who takes us through the story. "It demands that the reader almost become a writer and fill in the gaps. You really have to think about the characters," Kidd said.
    (9)Oatley agreed. "Alice Munro doesn't tell you what to think," he said. "You, yourself, have to make inferences about characters. And that's often what we're doing in our real-life conversations." Or at least that's what people could do.
    (10)Reading literary fiction could also offer a way to "practice" your social skills and use them more in real life, according to another researcher not involved in the study. "It's like how pilots train in a flight simulator," said Raymond Mar, an associate professor of psychology at York University, in Toronto, who has collaborated with Oatley. "This is a great study," Mar said of the new study. But he added that the overall research in this area is "still in its infancy" and one key question is whether literary fiction really is better than other fiction.
    (11)Mar and his colleagues recently found that fans of romance novels tended to do best on tests of empathy. Unlike the current study, Mar's study did not test people after having them read different types of fiction. So it's possible that there is something else about romance-novel readers that makes them more understanding of others.
    (12)Still, according to Mar, it's too early to tell people to trade in their Danielle Steel for Alice Munro, at least if the goal is boosting empathy.
    (13)It's also possible that plays, movies or even TV shows could build your empathy muscles, according to Kidd. But reading may be special, he said, because it provides no Visuals and you have to engage your imagination more.
    (14)Everyone agreed that the findings suggest literature is important beyond entertainment or improving vocabulary. "There's a common belief that reading literature is frivolous, or not practical," Mar said. "But there's a growing body of evidence that it's important in skills that we need in our lives."1.  Increase in immigration in Austria fails to improve locals' life mainly because of ______. (PASSAGE ONE)
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】 根据题干中的Austria定位到第4段第4句。该句是举例说明上一句的情况,因此要正确理解第3句。第3句指出,在一些福利优渥或福利制度设计不当的国家中,相反的情况也是存在的,而要理解这个相反的情况指的是什么要回到第2句。第2句指出在美国,移民的增加可以提高本土居民的生活水平,也就是说第3句所说的相反情况是移民的增加会降低本土居民的生活水平,所以第4句的Austria就是一个例子,证明因为福利制度设计不当而导致移民无法提高本土居民的生活水平,故D项为答案。
   关于Austria的表述,只在第4段第4句中出现,而且只谈到了它属于“福利制度设计不当的国家”,并没有提到该国的移民是否技能不足,劳动力市场是否不完善,或者当地人工资水平过低等情况。因此A项、B项和C项都属于未提及的内容。
[参考译文]
   PASSAGE ONE
   (1)在美国,移民的生活可能会很艰辛。正如亚特兰大罗马尼亚银行的一位职员所说,要找到一份好工作,“你必须像森林里的狼一样,能够嗅到最可口的肉。”如果你找不到工作,别指望纳税人会来解救你。与一些欧洲国家不同的是,在美国,身体健全的移民想靠国家福利活下去是极其困难的。1996年通过的一项法律明确禁止了大多数移民者——甚至包括那些拥有合法身份的移民——取得任何联邦福利。
   (2)根据加利福尼亚大学的一项新研究,这就是为什么美国比其他发达国家更能吸收移民的原因之一。研究人员试图衡量移民对20个富裕国家的本国居民的影响,考虑的因素包括了移民和本国居民的技能差异、不完善的劳动力市场,以及各国福利制度的规模。
   (3)他们的研究结果为支持边境更加开放的人提供了有利证据。在受测的20个国家中,如果都采取将外国劳动力完全拒之门外的做法,那么有19个国家会让该国居民的境况更糟。这样做对移民者本身的影响就更不用说了,如果允许他们跨境来找工作,他们的受益程度远超其他人。
   (4)该研究还表明,大多数国家还可以接受比现在更多的移民。在美国,移民在人口中的占比每增加1个百分点,本土居民的生活水平就会提高0.05%。然而,在一些福利优渥或福利制度设计不当的国家中,相反的情况也是存在的。在奥地利、比利时、德国、卢森堡、荷兰、瑞典和瑞士,移民占比每上升1个百分点,本国居民的生活水平就会略有下降。在比利时,失业的移民几乎能获得相当于其失业前工资三分之二的国家福利金,这必然会让寻找新工作这件事变得不那么迫切。
   (5)这些影响都不是很大,但这项研究动摇了“移民抢了当地人的饭碗或压低了他们的工资”的说法。研究发现,许多移民从事着美国人不愿意做的工作。这使得劳动力市场更“顺畅”,最终为当地人创造了更多的就业机会。当地人经营的杂货店之所以生意更好,是因为有移民来帮他们摘水果以供出售。来自印度的计算机科学家帮助美国软件公司扩张。一项早期的研究发现,即使移民拥有和当地人同等水平的技能,移民挣得也比当地人少,因此移民提高了企业利润,推动企业发展,使得企业能雇佣更多的本地人。
   PASSAGE TWO
   (1)这位老妇人的某些举止引起了我的注意。虽然步伐缓慢且有些犹豫,但她还是从容地迈出了步子。她的动作没有任何迟疑。她的动作暗示,她的身体和其他人一样好,而且她有“任务”在身。
   (2)那是几年前的事了。当时我在当地一家大型购物中心的音像店里做着一份假期兼职工作。从商店里面我看到购物中心大厅外的人潮奔流不息。
   (3)那位老妇人是在一位年轻女子的陪伴下走进店里来的,我猜那是她的女儿。她的女儿一脸极度不耐烦的样子,她翻白眼、发脾气、唉声叹气、每隔几秒钟就看一次手。如果她有绳子,她很可能会将她母亲绑住,然后拉着她走,好让她跟上其他购物者匆忙的步伐。
   (4)老妇人与年轻女子分开,开始在离她最近的架子上翻看DVD光盘。我犹豫了一下,走过去问她是否需要帮助。老妇人朝着我微笑,给我看一张皱巴巴的纸,纸上潦草地写着一个标题。这个标题很不寻常,而且有些晦涩。很显然,寻找它的人对电影是有所了解的,知道什么是高质量的电影。
   (5)我没有急着帮老妇人找DVD,而是让她和我一起走,这样我就可以告诉她在哪里能找到它。现在回想起来,我想当时我应该是想享受一会儿和她在一起的时光。她谨慎的步子让我想起了我自己的母亲,她在去年的圣诞节去世了。
   (6)我们往音像店后面走时,我给老妇人介绍了这个区域的布局——旧电视节目区、动作电影区、动画片区、科幻小说区。老妇人似乎很高兴有我这样一个不着急的人陪她闲聊。
   (7)我们找到了那部电影,我称赞她的眼光不错。她微笑着告诉我,这是她在她儿子这个岁数时非常喜欢的一部电影,她希望他会像她一样喜欢这部电影。也许,她说的时候带着一丝伤感,他可以和他的孩子一起观看这部电影。接着我不太情愿但又不得不将这位老妇人送回她的“看守人”身旁,她依然站在店门口,不耐烦地跺着脚。
   (8)我陪老妇人走到收银台排队,然后退了回来,在那年轻的女子附近徘徊。当轮到老妇人结账时,她用现金付账,数美元和硬币时和先前一样从容不迫。
   (9)当收银员将光碟装进塑料袋时,我走向那位年轻女子。
   (10)“那是你母亲吗?”我问。
   (11)我差点以为她会告诉我这不关我的事。但她可能确信我能容忍她的不耐烦,于是翻着白眼说:“是的。”她的回答带羞些许恼火——半是叹气,半是抱怨。
   (12)我依旧看着她的母亲,我对她说,“我能提点建议吗?”
   (13)“当然,”这位女儿说。
   (14)我微笑着,让自己看上去不像是在批评她。“珍惜她,”我说。她一脸疑惑地看着我,我解释道:“当她去世之后,你只能回想起一些零碎的时刻。就像此时此刻。我就知道这是什么感觉。”
   (15)这是真的,我仍然想念我的母亲,并且清楚地记得过去因为我的不耐烦而使她痛苦难受的时刻。每每想到,我都伤心不已。
   (16)老妇人谨慎缓慢地回到女儿的“监护”下,她们一起朝音像店的出口走去。他们在那里站了一会儿,肩并着肩,看着节日的人流涌动,等待加入其中的时机。然后,这位女儿瞥了一眼母亲,慢慢地、难为情地伸出双手,搂住了母亲的肩膀,流露出一丝平日少见的情感,然后轻轻地将她母亲带回到人群中。
   PASSAGE THREE
   (1)一项新研究表明,阅读获奖的文学作品可能会提升你读懂他人的能力。位于纽约市的社会研究新学院的研究人员发现,当志愿者阅读广受欢迎的“文学小说”时,他们理解他人情绪的能力似乎暂时提升了。但对于经常占据畅销书排行榜的非小说类或“流行”小说,比如悬疑小说、言情小说及科幻小说,情况并非如此。
   (2)专家表示,在《科学》杂志网站上报道的研究结果表明,文学可能有助于让人更看透生活,融入生活。
   (3)“阅读文学小说不仅仅是为了打发时间。也不仅仅是为了逃避,”多伦多大学认知心理学名誉教授凯思·奥特利说,“它能够使人更好地了解他人,并将这技能用到日常生活中。”
   (4)奥特利没有参与这项新研究,但他曾从事过一些初步的研究,这些研究表明阅读文学作品可以提升人们对他人的同理心。他的团队发现那些读过很多小说的人往往会在标准测试表现出更多的同理心,但对于那些热衷阅读非小说类作品的人来说就不是这样了。
   (5)但是,奥特利及其团队的研究无法证明文学作品能够增强人们的同理心,因为可能只是同理心强的人刚好喜欢读小说。但奥特利说,此次的新研究就能提供了两者有“因果关系”的证据。在这项研究中,研究人员设置了五个实验,参与者在参加一些标准化测试之前,要么阅读文学小说,要么流行小说、非小说类作品或者什么也不读。其中一项测试被称为“看眼读心”。受测者必须观看演员眼睛的照片,然后猜测每幅照片所表达的是何种情绪。该测试被认为是一种对同理心的衡量方法。总体而言,与其他三种情况相比,该研究的参与者在阅读文学小说后表现更好。
   (6)该研究的首席研究员大卫·科默·基德说,虽然这只是个小小的进步,“不像是把成绩从C升到A”,但是只要阅读大约10分钟,就能看得到效果,而且统计数据能强而有力地证明我们的发现,这意味着不太可能是偶然的。
   (7)“文学”小说并没有硬性的定义。因此,基德及其同事选择了当代作品,这些作品要么曾获得优秀文学奖项,要么入围优秀文学奖项最后一轮的候选。作品包括路易斯·厄德里克的《圆屋》、丝米妮·瓦德的《拾骨》和爱丽丝·门罗的短篇小说《科里》。而流行小说包括吉莉安·弗林的《消失的爱人》和丹尼尔·斯蒂尔的《母亲的罪过》等畅销书。
   (8)文学小说有何特别之处?基德指出:“一方面,它通常更注重人物,而非情节”,但除此之外,他说,通常没有一个“权威的叙述者”带我们领略故事。“文学小说几乎要求读者成为一名作家并填补小说里的空白。你真的需要考虑其中的人物,”基德说。
   (9)奥特利同意这个观点。他说:“爱丽丝·门罗并没有告诉你该考虑什么,你自己必须对人物作出推断。而这是我们在现实对话中常常干的事情。”或者至少这是人们可以做的事情。
   (10)另一位没有参与该研究的研究人员表示,阅读文学小说也可以是一种“练习”社交技巧的方式,并让你在现实生活中更多地应用社交技巧。“这就像飞行员在飞行模拟器中训练一样,”与奥特利合作的多伦多约克大学心理学副教授雷蒙德·马尔说。他对这项新研究的评价是“意义很大的研究”。但他补充道,这一领域的研究整体上“还处于起步阶段”,一个关键问题是文学小说是否真的比其他小说好。
   (11)马尔和他的同事们最近发现,言情小说迷往往在同理心测试中表现最好。与目前的研究不同,马尔的研究并没有让人们阅读不同类型的小说,然后进行测试。因此,可能还有其他一些因素使言情小说读者更能了解他人。
   (12)马尔说,现在就告诉人们把畅销书卖掉、换成看文学小说(比如卖掉丹尼尔·斯蒂尔的作品,入手爱丽丝·门罗的作品),还为时过早,至少如果目标是提升同理心的话。
   (13)根据基德的说法,戏剧、电影甚至电视节目或许也能锻炼同理心。但他说,阅读可能很特别,因为它不提供视觉效果,你必须投入更多想象力。
   (14)每个人都同意,这些发现表明文学不只是娱乐和扩大词汇,它还有更重要的作用。马尔说:“人们普遍认为文学是无聊的、不实用的,但是越来越多的证据表明,在培养生活中所需的技能上,文学极为重要。”