— He __________the period of time
— Sorry, I didn't mean to be so___________.
— _________?They were banned to keep the cities clean.
My cousin is nine years old, a little bit fat and doesn't do really well at school. She is heavily 1, and thus has developed some resistance and 2 towards adults, who usually don't put high hopes in her.
Yesterday we went to an art 3together. There were paintings from kids with disabilities. My 1ittle girl has a(n)4eye, for the paintings she liked most were also the best of the show. She voluntarily helped to5the chairs and table for a sharing session, painted by herself alongside new fiends and also6helped me to get my bag from another room, something that doesn't happen often at 7as she's usually8to her iPad.
In the afternoon, we went to buy books together. I bought a book written by a mom 9her journey with her autistic(自闭的)son. On the bus back home, I 10introduced the book to my cousin, and to my 11she was truly interested. She kept asking me to tell more stories about the boy who12with small things in life. Even when the subject wandered elsewhere, she 13hearing more about this boy. I have never seen her so interested in a 14. Usually when she talks to me she describes events without a 15focus. I'm 16that the life of a 17 has found its way into this little girl's heart.
I'm very thankful for the18of books, for the beauty that my cousin revealed to me, and for the time we had together. I 19that I can keep seeing clearly the wonderful things in her, so that whenever unkindness20, I can remind her how truly wonderful she has always been.
PAssion Arts Festival PASSIONARTSIC PAssion Arts Festival this year will run from 6 July to 25 August. The festival theme, "Our Home, Our HeARTs", invites residents to use arts to express our love for our community and for our country. Our aim is to bring residents together to experience and appreciate creativity. Look forward to over 500 arts activities and programmes. The following are some of them. |
ARTS PARTY@TELOK BLANGAH TIME:14 July(9:00 AM-12:00 AM) PLACE: Talok Blangah Mall Art can happen in so many ways and for so many people. For example, you can participate in the large oil painting activity or carry art in your pocket anytime and anywhere by creating your own matchbox art. We're also bringing art therapy to the elderly as it becomes more popular in our society. Come explore Nagomi art, a Japanese art healing method that introduces calm and relaxation to the painter. |
HUES IN TUNE TIME:20 July(2:00 PM-8:00 PM) PLACE: Kampung Admiralty, One of the most expected part is Hues in Tune's performance line-up. Sembawang Hues is the highlight with music performances. Fusion Tunes features cross-racial bands, and Our Own Tune presents heartfelt music by talented residents. |
L.O.U.D@KAMPONG GLAM TIME:27 July(7:30 PM-9:30 PM) PLACE: Kampong Glam Community Club At Kampong Glam, the theatre performance Voices from the Belly of Carp will take us back centuries into the country's history for new discoveries. |
MAD TEA PARTY TIME:12 August(9:30 AM-11:30 AM) PLACE: Pasir Ris Elias CC ARTISTS: Stacy Huang Jesse Chong and Lena Lok Mad Tea Party is inspired by Alice in Wonderland. This will be an installation of delightful treats, where residents can gather around the tea table to create "food" together. |
"New and improved. "These words are put in so many marketing campaigns that we tend to accept them as linked. But many new drugs aren't an improvement over the best existing drug for a given condition, and the fast drug-approval processes in recent years have added to the uncertainty about their advantages.
A recent report in the British Medical Journal, "New Drugs; Where Did We Go Wrong and What We Do Better?" analyzed the issue, The authors looked at 216 drugs approved between 2011 and 2017; 152 were newly developed, and 64 were existing medicine approved for new uses. Only 25% offered a major advantage over the established treatment, and fully 58% had no confirmed added benefit to reduce symptoms or improve health-related quality of life.
"This doesn't mean there's no added benefit, "lead author Wieseler said. "It just means we have no positive proof Either we have no studies or have studies not good enough.”Wieseler and her co-authors work for a German agency which evaluates new treatments and advises on whether the country's health care system should pay a premium(补贴)for them. If payers think a new drug isn't better than an existing drug, these agencies will require that hospitals try the cheaper drug first.
Germany's HTA demands trials to prove that a new treatment beats the existing standard. This isn't always practical. For one thing, such studies can be expensive and time-consuming, with no guarantee of success. Secondly, it can discourage companies from attempting to develop new alternatives. This is already happening. Drug developers are increasingly focused on areas where there are no good treatments to compete with, such as rare diseases.
This lack of meaningful data to guide patients is a major point of Wieseler's paper. With accelerated approval, there are more products approved, with a greater amount of uncertainty about risks and benefits. But there are other solutions besides drug trials. One idea is to require postmarket studies to track the effectiveness of newly approved drugs-a step too often neglected.
One day, gardeners might not just hear the buzz of bees among their flowers, but the whirr of robots, too. Scientists have managed to turn an unassuming drone into a remote-controlled pollinator by attaching horsehairs coated with a special, sticky glue to the under part of it.
Animal pollinators are needed for the reproduction of 90% of flowering plants and one third of human food crops. Chief among those are bees-but many bee populations in the United States have been in steep decline in recent decades. Thus, the decline of bees isn't just worrisome because it could spoil ecosystems. but also, because it could spoil agriculture and economy. People have been trying to come up with replacement techniques, but none of them are especially effective yet.
Scientists have thought about using drones, but they haven't figured out how to make free-flying robot insects that can rely on their own power source without being attached to a wire. “It's very tough work." said Senior author Elijio Miyako, a chemist at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology. His particular contribution to the field involves a kind of glue, one he'd considered a mistake 10 years before and stuck in a storage cabinet. When it was rediscovered a decade later, it hadn't dried up or broke down at all. “I was so surprised because it still had high viscosity,” Miyako said.
The chemist noticed that when dropped, the glue absorbed an impressive amount of dust from the floor. Miyako realized this material could be very useful for picking up pollen. He and his colleagues chose a drone and attached horsehairs to its smooth surface to imitate a bee's furry body. They coated those horsehairs in the glue, and then controlled the drones over flowers, where they would pick up the pollen from one flower and then deposit the pollen at another one, thus fertilizing it.
The scientists looked at the hairs under a scanning electron microscope and counted up the pollen grains attached to the surface and found that the drones whose horsehairs had been coated with the glue had about 10 times more pollen than those that had not been coated with the glue.
Mivako does not think such drones would replace bees altogether, but could simply help bees with their pollinating duties. There's a lot of work to be done before that's a reality, however. Small drones will need to become more controllable and energy efficient, as well as smarter, with better GPS and artificial intelligence.
The story of a voyage bearing witness to plastic pollution in the oceans, Junk Raft(筏子),based on facts, is an exciting, thought-provoking book. Science educator and researcher Marcus Eriksen's navigational feat(航海壮举)is holding readers' attention and interest--88 days crossing some 4,000 kilometers of open ocean, on a raft made of 15,000 plastic bottles wrapped in fishing nets. But it is more. Two equally fascinating storylines are made up through the written records of a series of events: Eriksen's evolution from soldier to research director of the environmental non-profit 5 Gyres Institute, and the journey we all need to take towards a more sustainable use of plastics.
Around 15%of all the litter in our oceans in plastic, and a calculated 5 million tonnes of plastic waste enter the seas annually. Unavoidably, it is now present at the sea surface and on shorelines, in Arctic seas and on the sea bed at depths of 3,500 metres. Around 700 sea species are known to come into contact with pieces of waste plastic material-and can be harmed or killed by taking in it or becoming twisted and caught in it. There are also concerns about plastics accumulating in commercially important species of fish and shellfish. The waters and shores of Hawaii are particularly heavily pottuted, giving a rationale(理由)for Eriksen's destination.
This environmental challenge has attracted increasing scientific, media and societal attention in recent years. yet few accounts have conveyed the\wider picture accessibly Junk Raft does just this—while exposing our frustratingly slow progress on a issue of major importance to fisheries, tourism and, finally, the health of the world's oceans.
Eriksen lists the issues associated with the accumulation of sea plastic: the causes, consequences and potential solutions. Our single-use culture is the main offender. For more than 60 years, society and industry have been producing more and more throwaway items particularly packaging. Some solutions lie in better acquisition of materials at the end of their lives, in a circular economy.
Eriksen takes the crisis into consideration together with a timeline of scientific discovery and advancement since the 1970s.Alongside this he gives a very personal, somewhat North American, view the troubles of industry and policy involvement the side plots and blind alleys, and the tactics(战术) of avoidance and disturbance he has so often experienced. There are parallels, he shows, with the troubles that faced those who fought to raise awareness around the health impacts of smoking.
Throughout, we are regularly brought back to the realities of life aboard the raft, with Eriksen's fellow sailor Joel Paschal. This is both fascinating and eventful, from their slow, occasionally very dangerous progress to the moments when it seems the raft will break up into pieces, littering the ocean with the waste material Eriksen is trying so hard to fight against. Eriksen's wider journey also takes him onto dry land, where he touches on the accumulation of land plastic. He learns about the consumption of plastic bags by camels-a serious issue in some desert countries.
It can be difficult to judge the direct impacts of projects such as Eriksen's, but he rightly notes the Importance of raising awareness of the risks of disposable plastic. Eriksen has also done much to emphasize the environmental consequences of polymer microbeads(聚合物微粒)in the US Great Lakes, providing key evidence that led to the introduction of a law.
Junk Raft is filled with adventure, romance, a sense of optimism and important truths that will be needed by the thousands of groups. It serves as a reflection of the choices and journeys that each of us makes and helps us understand how plastic in the oceans is closely connected with the future of human life.
Generally speaking, people often return to a set level of happiness despite life's ups and downs, For instance, people who win the lottery tend to return to roughly their original levels of happiness after the novelty of the win has worn off. The same-is true for those who are in major accidents and lose the use of their legs. The change in ability can be damaging at first, but people generally return to their pre-accident levels of happiness after the habituation period. This phenomenon is called hedonic adaptation, a concept studied by positive psychology researchers.
There are activities that are more or less affected by hedonic adaptation. Some of these activities are known as pleasures. They can lift your mood and leave you feeling wonderful, but their effects can be relatively a short time. What's more, we get used to them relatively quickly. If you have the same meal every day for a week, for example, you may find it to be less pleasurable by the end of the week. Gratifications(满足)are also such activities affected by hedonic adaptation. They can get us into a feeling of "flow” where we don't notice the passage of time, and where we're thoroughly engaged in what we're doing. Gratifications are activities that require more effort and thought, but the payoff is higher as well The more we engage, the more we enjoy!
Knowing that pleasures don't last long in their effects may make them seem less worth the effort than gratifications. There are reasons why they can be perfect for certain situations, however. First, they bring a quick lift in mood without a great deal of effort. This is actually quite valuable because there is significant research that shows that a lift in mood can lead to chain reaction of positive feelings. Second, gratifications do take more effort, so when you only have few minutes or a very limited amount of energy, pleasures are often the simpler and more accessible option.
Thankfully, we can do something to move away from the limiting effects of hedonic adaptation and engage in activities that can create a greater level of happiness in lie. For example, be sure to make time for hobbies! It doesn't really matter what the hobby is; as long as it's one you enjoy, you'll benefit from it, and these benefits will extend into the rest of your life. It's also a good idea to help other people. This can create greater meaning in your life, and thus create greater happiness. Enjoying your positive experiences is also a great way to maximize the positive in your life. So at the end of the day, a few days, a week, write about three things you enjoyed that day. Then, you'll be reliving these positive experience as you write about them, and can relive them again when you read.
Hedonic Adaptation |
|
Concept of hedonic adaptation |
Hedonic adaptation refers to people's general tendency to return to a set level of despite life's ups and downs. |
Two kinds of activities influenced by hedonic adaptations |
●Pleasures are activities whose positive effects are ,and our adaptation to them is also gone fast. ●Gratifications are activities that take us more effort but can bring more results. In other words, compared with pleasures, they are moreto the effects of hedonic adaptation. |
Advantages of pleasures over gratifications |
●Pleasures not only can lift our moods quickly but also are relatively
●Pleasures are a better-choice when we're tooor worn out. |
Tips of the effects of hedonic |
●Take up hobbies that to you whatever they are. ●Do others a favor and it can make you live more ●Enjoy your positive experiences by taking a regular about adaptation them. |
Twenty years ago, getting sick meant visiting a doctor. Now, many internet tools seek to identify what disease a person has based on symptoms described. The following are some studies. |
Study 1 A study led by an American researcher showed these web-based tools may be useful for patients who are trying to decide whether they should get to a doctor quickly. Besides, online symptom checkers can help seriously-ill patients for a guided care. According to the findings, overall the 23 symptom checkers provided correct advice in 58 percent of cases in more critical cases. |
Study2 Australian researchers at Edith Cowan University in Perth. did a new study, which examined 36 international internet-based symptom checkers, finding these online symptom checkers were rarely correct and could be harmful. Michella Hill, a leader of the research, said, "While it may be tempting to use these tools to find out what may be causing your symptoms, most of the time they are unreliable and sometimes can be dangerous.” |
【写作内容】
1)用约30个单词概括上述信息的主要内容;
2)谈谈你如何看待在线症状检查工具,用2-3个理由或论据支撑你的观点。
【写作要求】
1)写作过程中不能直接引用原文语句;
2)作文中不能出现真实姓名和学校名称;
3)不必写标题。
【评分标准】
内容完整,语言规范,语篇连贯,词数适当。