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The Robots Are Coming IELTS Reading Answers With Explanation

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The Robots Are Coming IELTS Reading Answers

with Explanation
Luyện tập đê
̀ IELTS Reading Practice với passage The Robots Are Coming được lấy
từ cuốn sa
́ ch IELTS IELTS Trainer - Test 1 - Passage 2 với trải nghiệm thi IELTS trên
máy và giải thích đáp án chi tiết bằng Linearthinking, kèm list từ vựng IELTS cần học
trong bài đọc.

DOL IELTS Đình Lực Feb 28, 2022

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Từ vựng
Bài đọc (reading passage)
The robots are coming

What is the current state of play in Artificial Intelligence?

A. Can robots advance so far that they become the ultimate threat to our existence? Some scientists say
no, and dismiss the very idea of Artificial Intelligence. The human brain, they argue, is the most
complicated system ever created, and any machine designed to reproduce human thought is bound to fail.
Physicist Roger Penrose of Oxford University and others believe that machines are physically incapable of
human thought. Colin McGinn of Rutgers University backs this up when he says that Artificial Intelligence
‘is like sheep trying to do complicated psycho analysis. They just don’t have the conceptual equipment
they need in their limited brains’.

B. Artificial Intelligence, or Al, is different from most technologies in that scientists still understand very
little about how intelligence works. Physicists have a good understanding of Newtonian mechanics and
the quantum theory of atoms and molecules, whereas the basic laws of intelligence remain a mystery.

But a sizable number of mathematicians and computer scientists, who are specialists in the area, are
optimistic about the possibilities.

To them it is only a matter of time before a thinking machine walks out of the laboratory. Over the years,
various problems have impeded all efforts to create robots. To attack these difficulties, researchers tried
to use the ‘top- down approach’, using a computer in an attempt to program all the essential rules onto a
single disc. By inserting this into a machine, it would then become self-aware and attain human-like
intelligence.

C. In the 1 950s and 1 960s great progress was made, but the shortcomings of these prototype robots
soon became clear. They were huge and took hours to navigate across a room. Meanwhile, a fruit fly, with
a brain containing only a fraction of the computing power, can effortlessly navigate in three dimensions.

Our brains, like the fruit fly’s, unconsciously recognize what we see by performing countless calculations.
This unconscious awareness of patterns is exactly what computers are missing. The second problem is
robots’ lack of common sense. Humans know that water is wet and that mothers are older than their
daughters. But there is no mathematics that can express these truths. Children learn the intuitive laws of
biology and physics by interacting with the real world. Robots know only what has been programmed into
them.

D. Because of the limitations of the top-down approach to Artificial Intelligence, attempts have been
made to use a ‘bottom-up’ approach instead – that is, to try to imitate evolution and the way a baby
learns. Rodney Brooks was the director of MIT’s Artificial Intelligence laboratory, famous for its lumbering
‘top- down’ walking robots. He changed the course of research when he explored the unorthodox idea of
tiny ‘insectoid’ robots that learned to walk by bumping into things instead of computing mathematically
the precise position of their feet. Today many of the descendants of Brooks’ insectoid robots are on Mars
gathering data for NASA (The National Aeronautics and Space Administration), running across the dusty
landscape of the planet. For all their successes in mimicking the behavior of insects, however, robots
using neural networks have performed miserably when their programmers have tried to duplicate in them
the behavior of higher organisms such as mammals. MIT’s Marvin Minsky summarises the problems of Al:
‘The history of Al is sort of funny because the first real accomplishments were beautiful things, like a
machine that could do well in a maths course. But then we started to try to make machines that could
answer questions about simple children’s stories. There’s no machine today that can do that.’

E. There are people who believe that eventually there will be a combination between the top-down and
bottom-up, which may provide the key to Artificial Intelligence. As adults, we blend the two approaches. It
has been suggested that our emotions represent the quality that most distinguishes us as human, that it is
impossible for machines ever to have emotions. Computer expert Hans Moravec thinks that in the future
robots will be programmed with emotions such as fear to protect themselves so that they can signal to
humans when their batteries are running low, for example. Emotions are vital in decision-making. People
who have suffered a certain kind of brain injury lose the ability to experience emotions and become
unable to make decisions. Without emotions to guide them, they debate endlessly over their options.
Moravec points out that as robots become more intelligent and are able to make choices, they could
likewise become paralysed with indecision. To aid them, robots of the future might need to have emotions
hardwired into their brains.

F. There is no universal consensus as to whether machines can be conscious, or even, in human terms,
what consciousness means. Minsky suggests the thinking process in our brain is not localised but spread
out, with different centres competing with one another at any given time. Consciousness may then be
viewed as a sequence of thoughts and images issuing from these different, smaller ‘minds’, each one
competing for our attention. Robots might eventually attain a ‘silicon consciousness’. Robots, in fact, might
one day embody an architecture for thinking and processing information that is different from ours – but
also indistinguishable. If that happens, the question of whether they really ‘understand’ becomes largely
irrelevant. A robot that has perfect mastery of syntax, for all practical purposes, understands what is
being said.
Câu hỏi (questions)
Question 1 - 7
Reading Passage has six paragraphs A-F. Which paragraph contains the following information?

Write the correct letter A-F

NB You may use any letter more than once.

1 An insect that proves the superiority of natural intelligence over Artificial Intelligence

2 Robots being able to benefit from their mistakes

3 Many researchers not being put off believing that Artificial Intelligence will eventually be
developed

4 An innovative approach that is having limited success

5 The possibility of creating Artificial Intelligence being doubted by some academics

6 No generally accepted agreement of what our brains do

7 Robots not being able to extend the* intelligence in the same way as humans

Question 8 - 1 0
Look at the following people and the list of statements below.

Match each person with the correct statement A-E

Write the correct letter A-E

List of Findings

A Artificial Intelligence may require something equivalent to feelings in order to succeed.

B Different kinds of people use different parts of the brain.

C Tests involving fiction have defeated Artificial Intelligence so far.

D People have intellectual capacities which do not exist in computers.

E People have no reason to be frightened of robots.

8 Colin McGinn
9 Marvin Minsky

10 Hans Moravec

Question 1 1 - 1 3
Complete the summary below.

Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

When will we have a thinking machine?

Despite some advances, the early robots had certain weaknesses. They were given the information
they needed on a 11 . This was known as the ‘top-down’ approach and enabled them to do
certain tasks but they were unable to recognise 12 nor did they have any intuition or
ability to make decisions based on experience. Rodney Brooks tried a different approach. Robots
similar to those invented by Brooks are to be found on 13 where they are collecting
information.
Answer key (đáp án và giải thích)

1 C https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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2 D https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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3 B https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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4 D https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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5 A https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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6 F https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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7 C https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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8 D https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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9 C https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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10 A https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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11 disc https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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12 patterns https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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13 Mars https://www.dol.vn/ielts-r
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