单选题

    Close ReadingDirections: There are two passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions (46-55) or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and write the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.Passage OneResearchers for Cornell university and Intel produced a chip called Loihi that reportedly makes computers think like biological brains, according toDaily Mail.The researchers created the circuit on the chip, mirroring organic circuits found in theolfactory bulbs(嗅球)of a dog’s brain, which is how they process their sense of smell. The Loihi chip can identify a specific odor on the first try and even tell other background smells, said Intel, according toDaily Mail.The chip can even detect smells humans emit when sick with a disease-which vary depending on the illness-and smells linked to environmental gases and drugs. The key to sniffer dogs isn’t their olfactory system alone, but their incredible ability to remember-this is why they’re trained. Similarly, the artificial intelligence of the chip is trained to identify different smells and remember them, so that next time, it knows.The chip processes information just like mammal brains by using electrical signals to process smells. When a person smells something, the air molecules interact with nasal receptors that forward signals to the olfactory bulb in the brain. Then the brain translates the signals to identify which smell it’s experiencing, based on memories of previous experiences with the specific smell.“We are developing a method for Loihi to mimic what happens in your brain when you smell something.” said Senior Research Scientist in Intel’s Lab, Nabil Iman, in a statement, according to Daily Mial. Imam added that the work “demonstrates Loihi’s potential to provide important sensing capabilities that could benefit various industries.”So far, the researcher have trained it on ten harmful smells. It can be installed on robots in airports to help identify hazardous objects, or integrated withsensors in power plants or hospitals to detect dangerous gases.Similar biotechnology has seen the implementation in grasshoppers recently outfitted withcomputer chips to sniff-out bombs. However,this negativelyaffects their lifespan, limiting their use.While sniffer dogs might one day be out of a job, the circuits using AI to mimic the process of smell bring us one step closer to recreating the human sensory system in artificial intelligence.There are challenges in olfactory sensing, Imam says. When you walk into a grocery, you might smell a strawberry, but its smell might be similar to that of a blueberry or a banana, which induce very similar neural activity patterns in the brain. Sometimes it’s even hard for humans to distinguish between one fruit from a blend of scents. Systems might get tripped up when they smell a strawberry from Italy and one from California, which might have different aromas, yet need to be grouped into a common category. “These are challenges in olfactory signal recognition that we’re working on and that we hope to solve in the next couple of years before this becomes a product that can solve real-world problems beyond the experimental ones we have demonstrated in the lab,” Imam says. His work, he contends, is a “prime example of contemporary research taking place at the crossroads of neuroscience and artificial intelligence.”(46)What do we learn about Loihi?

    A. It is a high-tech device that produces computer chips.
    B. It is a dog’s biological organ to process its sense of smell.
    C. It is a computer program that aids creating the circuit.
    D. It is a chip that uses AI technology to identify a smell.

    单选题

    Passage TwoAddictive manufacturing, or 3D printing as it is popularly called, can make complex objects out of many materials. The technology, though, has a problem: speed. Fusing together tiny filaments of plastic or melting successive layers of metallic powder into a solid shape takes time. This means even a small object may require hours to emerge from a 3D printer. Things can be printed simultaneously, in batches, which speeds things up a bit. But to carry the technology beyond specialist and low volume manufacturing into mass production will require a step-change in speed. This week, a group of researchers led by Joseph DeSimone of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, showed in a paper in Science, how that might be done.Their idea harks back to a process called stereolithography that was invented in 1986. Stereolithography uses ultraviolet (UV) light to cure plastic into the desired shape. A pattern of light played onto the surface of a vat of liquid polymer creates a solid layer out of part of that surface. The process is then repeated to cure another layer of polymer on top of the first, and then another, and another, with the resulting shape being lowered steadily into the liquid until it is complete. Dr DeSimone and his colleagues have turned stereolithography on its head. Their 3D printer works from the bottom of the vat rather than the top, and cures continuously as the growing object is gradually extracted from thefluid.Doing things continuously is much faster. The top-down approach makes layers a twentieth to a tenth of a millimeter thick. Each needs several seconds to complete, and it can take an hour or so to make just a few millimeters-worth of product. The continuous liquid interface production (CLIP) process, as Dr DeSimone calls the new method, is able to build items such as a 10cm-tall model of the Eiffel Tower in that amount of time. Other shapes have been printed even faster, at up to 50cm an hour.The process is not, however, just a matter of turning stereolithography upside down. For a start, the UV that cures the required shape has to be projected through a window in the bottom of the vat containing the liquid polymer. This window must also be permeable to oxygen, letting the gas pass into the zone between the window and the area being cured. Oxygen inhibits polymerization and is used in plastics production to slow down the process of curing. By employing it to create a “dead zone” in this way, Dr DeSimone stops the cured polymer sticking to the base of the vat. As the shape is steadily formed above the dead zone, the printer raises the object until, eventually, it emerges complete.Dr DeSimone and his colleagues have established a start up called Carbon3D to commercialize CLIP. At the moment it would be no rival to printing metals with a laser or electron beam, a technique that a number of aerospace companies are now using. But CLIP could give existing ways of printing plastics a run for their money. The researchers think it would be particularly good at making soft, elastic objects, and that it could be adapted for ceramics. It might also be used to make medical devices and even biological tissues—which one day may be printed on demand when patients need a transplant.(51)Whatdoes the passage say about CLIP?

    A. CLIP is a new method invented by Dr DeSimone by turning stereolithography upside down.
    By using CLIP, the250px-tall model of the Eiffel Tower can be built within half an hour.
    CLIP has already been put into market to make soft and elastic objects.
    D. CLIP can speed up the printing process and lead to mass production.

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