Reading Forecast 19122015 Updated 72 78 PDF
Reading Forecast 19122015 Updated 72 78 PDF
Reading Forecast 19122015 Updated 72 78 PDF
Passage Backgrounds
Checkboxes & Related Question Types
S2. 挠痒和大笑(生物类)
True / False / NG List of Headings
A The fingers of an outstretched arm are nearing your body; you bend away folding your torso, bending your head to
your shoulder in hopes that you don't get tickled; but the inevitable occurs: you are tickled and in hysterics you chuckle,
titter, and burst into uncontrollable laughter. Why do we laugh when we are tickled?
B Tickling is caused by a light sensation across our skin. At times the light sensation can cause itching; however, most of
the time it causes giggling. If a feather is gently moved across the surface of the skin, it can also cause tickling and
giggling. Heavy laughter is caused by someone or something placing repeated pressure on a person and tickling a
particular area. The spots tickled often are feet, toes, sides, underarms, and neck which cause a great deal of laughter.
Yngve Zotterman from Karolinksk Institute has found that tickling sensations involve signals from nerve fibers. These
nerve fibers are associated with pain and touch. Also, Zotterman has discovered tickling sensations to be associated not
only with nerve fibers but also with sense of touch because people who have lost pain sensations still laugh when tickled.
But really, why do we laugh? Why are we not able to tickle ourselves? What part of the brain is responsible for laughter
coordination of many muscles throughout the body. Laughter also increases blood pressure and heart rate, changes
breathing, reduces levels of certain neurochemicals (catecholamines, hormones) and provides a boost to the immune
system. Can laughter improve health? It may be a good way for people to relax because muscle tension is reduced after
laughing. Human tests have found some evidence that humorous videos and tapes can reduce feelings of pain, prevent
negative stress reactions and boost the brain's biological battle against infection.
D Researchers believe we process humor and laughter through a complex pathway of brain activity that encompasses
three main brain components. In one new study, researchers used imaging equipment to photograph the brain activity of
healthy volunteers while they underwent a sidesplitting assignment of reading written jokes, viewing cartoons from The
New Yorker magazine as well as "The Far Side" and listening to digital recordings of laughter. Preliminary results
indicate that the humor-processing pathway includes parts of the frontal lobe brain area, important for cognitive
processing; the supplementary motor area, important for movement; and the nucleus accumbens, associated with
pleasure. Investigations support the notion that parts of the frontal lobe are involved in humor. Subjects' brains were
imaged while they were listening to jokes. An area of the frontal lobe was activated only when they thought a joke was
funny. In a study that compared healthy individuals with people who had damage to their frontal lobes, the subjects with
damaged frontal lobes were more likely to choose wrong punch lines to written jokes and didn't laugh or smile as much
E Even though we may know more about what parts of the brain are responsible for humor, it is still hard to explain why
we don't laugh or giggle when we tickle ourselves. Darwin theorized within "The Expressions of the Emotions in Man
and Animals" that there was a link between tickling and laughter because of the anticipation of pleasure. Because we
cannot tickle ourselves and have caused laughter, Darwin speculated surprise from another person touching a sensitive
spot must have caused laughter. Some scientists believe that laughing caused by tickling is a built-in reflex even babies
have. If we tickle ourselves in the same spot as our friend tickled us, we do not laugh as we did previously. The
information sent to our spinal cord and brain should be exactly the same. Apparently for tickling to work, the brain needs
tension and surprise. When we tickle ourself, we know exactly what will happen... there is no tension or surprise. How
the brain uses this information about tension and surprise is still a mystery, but there is some evidence that the
cerebellum may be involved. Because one part of the brain tells another: "It's just you. Don't get excited". Investigations
suggest that during self-tickling, the cerebellum tells an area called the somato-sensory cortex what sensation to expect,
and that dampens the tickling sensation. It looks as if the killjoy is found in the cerebellum. Further explorations to
understand tickling and laughter were conducted by Christenfeld and Harris. Within "The Mystery of Ticklish Laughter"
and "Can a Machine Tickleyn", they explained that people laughed equally whether tickled by a machine or by a person.
The participants were not aware that who or what was tickling them. However, the laughter was equally resounded. It is
suggested that tickling response is a reflex, which, like Darwin suggested earlier, is dependent on the element of surprise.
F Damage to any one part of the brain may affect one's overall ability to process humor. Peter Derks, a professor of
psychology, conducted his research with a group of scientists at NASA-Langley in Hampton. Using a sophisticated
electroencephalogram (EEG), they measured the brain activity of 10 people exposed to humorous stimuli. How quickly
our brain recognizes the incongruity that deals with most humor and attaches an abstract meaning to it determines
whether we laugh. However, different people find different jokes funny. That can be due to a number of factors,
including differences in personality, intelligence, mental state and probably mood. But according to Derks, the majority of
people recognize when a situation is meant to be humorous. In a series of experiments, he noticed that several patients
recovering from brain injuries could not distinguish between something funny and something not.
G Dr. Shibata of the University of Rochester School of Medicine said our neurons get tickled when we hear a joke. The
brain's "funny bone" is located at the right frontal lobe just above the right eye and appears critical to our ability to
recognize a joke. Dr. Shibata gave his patients MRI scans to measure brain activity, trying to find out what part of the
brain is particularly active while telling the punch line of a joke as opposed to the rest of the joke and funny cartoons in
comparison to parts of the cartoons that are not funny. The jokes "tickled" the frontal lobes. The scans also showed
activity in the nucleus accumbens, which is likely related to our feeling of mirth after hearing a good joke and our
"addiction" to humor. While his research was about humor, the results could help lead to answers and solutions to
depression. Parts of the brain that are active during humor are actually abnormal in patients with depression. Eventually
brain scans might be used to assess patients with depression and other mood disorders. The research may also explain
why some stroke victims lose their sense of humor or suffer from other personality changes. The same part of the brain
Write the correct letter A-G, in boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet.
8 Darwin
10 Yngve Zotterman
11 Peter Derks
C People also laugh when tickled by a machine if they are not aware of it.
Using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the Reading Passage for each answer.
of humor and laughter. Results from one study using brain 12………
indicate that parts of the brain responsible for 13……… , movement and
2015 年大范围预测文档
1 G 2 C 3 F 4 E
5 D 6 B 7 G 8 A
9 C 10 F 11 D 12 imaging equipment