题目内容

【题目】请认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一个最恰当的单词。注意:每个空格只填1个单词。请将答案写在答题卡上相应题号的横线上。

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rushing into business. Firms of all types are using AI to forecast demand, hire workers and deal with customers. The McKinsey Global Institute, a think-tank within a consultancy, forecasts that just applying AI to marketing, sales and supply chains could create economic value of $2.7trn over the next 20 years.

Such grand forecasts fuel anxiety as well as hope. Less familiar, but just as important, is how AI will transform the workplace.

Start with the benefits.AI ought to improve productivity. Humanyze, a people analytics software provider, combines data from its badges(工牌)with employees’ calendars and e-mails to work out, say, whether office layouts favour teamwork .Slack, a workplace messaging app, helps managers assess how quickly employees accomplish tasks. Companies will see when workers are not just dozing off but also misbehaving.

Employees will gain, too. Thanks to advance in computer vision, AI can check that workers are wearing safety equipment and that no one has been harmed on the factory floor. Some will appreciate more feedback on their work and welcome a sense of how to do better.

Machines can help ensure that pay rises and promotions go to those who deserve them. That starts with hiring. People often have biases but algorithms(算法), if designed correctly, can be more unprejudiced. Software can flag patterns that people might miss.

Yet AIs benefits will come with many potential drawbacks. Algorithms may not be free of the biases of their programmers, which can have unintended consequences. The length of a travel may predict whether an employee will quit a job, but this focus may harm poorer applicants. Older staff might work more slowly than younger ones and could risk losing their positions if all AI looks for is productivity. And surveillance(监控)may feel Orwellian—a sensitive matter now that people have begun to question how much Facebook and other tech giants know about their private lives.

As regulators and employers weigh the pros and cons of AI in the workplace, three principles ought to guide its spread. First, data should be anonymized where possible. Microsoft, for example, has a product that shows individuals how they manage their time in the office, but gives managers information only in aggregated(整合)form. Second, the use of AI ought to be transparent. Employees should be told what technologies are being used in their workplaces and which data are being gathered. As a matter of routine, algorithms used by firms to hire, fire and promote should be tested for bias and unintended consequences. Last, countries should let individuals request their own data, whether they are ex-workers wishing to contest a dismissal or jobseekers hoping to demonstrate their ability to prospective employers.

The march of Al into the workplace calls for trade-offs between privacy and performance. A fairer, more productive workforce is a prize worth having, but not if it chains employees. Striking a balance will require thought, a willingness for both employers and employees to adapt and a strong dose of humanity.

AI Spy

Passage outline

Supporting details

Introduction

While its future in business is full of 1, AI affects the workplace negatively.

Advantages of AI

·AI makes business more productive by analyzing the office layout, assessing the employees’ working efficiency and 2 their behavior.

·AI can 3 employees’ safety and provide feedback for them to better themselves.

·AI helps businesses hire more suitable employees and develop a better 4 of promotion and pay rise.

Potential drawbacks of AI

·Undesirable results may arise due to the biases of the programmers.

·Poorer applicants and older staff are at a 5

·Employees’ privacy is 6 in the age of AI.

Principles 7 AIs spread

·Keep the data anonymous when they are gathered and used.

8 employees of technologies used in the workplace and test the algorithms to avoid undesirable results.

·9 employees to access data for their own sake.

Summary

Only when employees and employers are 10 to adapt and respect each other, can AI make workplace fairer and more productive.

【答案】

1promise/hope

2monitoring

3ensure/guarantee

4system

5disadvantage

6violated/disturbed/invaded

7guiding

8Inform

9Permit/Allow

10willing

【解析】这是一篇议论文。AI正在各种公司中广泛应用。文章介绍了AI的好处以及它可能的缺点。另外文章提出三个引导AI发展的原则。

1根据第一段和第二段中的Artificial intelligence (AI) is rushing into business. Firms of all types are using AI to forecast demand, hire workers and deal with customers … Such grand forecasts fuel anxiety as well as hope可知,AI在各种公司中被广泛应用。它既给人们带来希望,同时易引发了一些焦虑。故第一个空应填:hope/promise:AI的发展充满希望,前景光明。

2根据第三段中的“Companies will see when workers are not just dozing off but also misbehaving”可知,AI可以帮助公司监督员工,知道员工什么时候打瞌睡,什么时候举止不端。故该空应用动词monitor,该空做介词by的宾语,故填monitoring。

3根据第四段中的AI can check that workers are wearing safety equipment and that no one has been harmed on the factory floor可知,AI可以确保员工的安全。该空填ensure/guarantee。

4根据第五段中的Machines can help ensure that pay rises and promotions go to those who deserve them可知机器可以帮助确保该加薪的人加薪,该升职的人升职。即:AI可以帮助企业发展一个更好的升职加薪系统。该空填system。

5根据第六段中的this focus may harm poorer applicants. Older staff might work more slowly than younger ones and could risk losing their positions if all AI looks for is productivity可知,AI可能会伤害比较贫穷的申请者,上了年纪的员工可能有失业的风险。由此可知,这两类人处于不利的地位,故该空填disadvantage。

6根据第六段中的And surveillance(监控)may feel Orwellian—a sensitive matter now that people have begun to question how much Facebook and other tech giants know about their private lives可知,监控的存在可能侵犯员工的隐私。该句是被动句故该空填过去分词violated/disturbed/invaded。

7根据第七段中的three principles ought to guide its spread可知,该段介绍了三个引导AI发展的原则。该空做principles的定语,它们之间是主动关系,故填现在分词。

8根据第七段中的Employees should be told what technologies are being used in their workplaces可知,员工们应该被告知他们的办公地点使用了什么技术。该空是祈使句,且后面有介词of,故填动词原形Inform(告知,通知)。

9根据第七段中的“countries should let individuals request their own data”可知各国应允许个人索取自己的数据。该空对应句子中的let一词,但后面有to,故填Permit/Allow。

10根据最后一段中的Striking a balance will require thought, a willingness for both employers and employees to adapt and a strong dose of humanity.可知保持平衡的条件之一就是雇主和雇员都愿意适应。该空对应句子中的willingness,但该空做表语,故填形容词willing。be willing to do意为乐意做某事”。

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【题目】TONY SOPRANO’S LAST MEAL

Between 1912 and the 1990s, New Jersey State was home to more than 20 diner manufacturers who made probably 95 percent of the diners in the U.S., says Katie Zavoski, who is helping hold a diner exhibit. What makes a diner a diner? (And not, say, a coffee shop?) Traditionally, a diner is built in a factory and then delivered to its own town or city rather than constructed on-site. Zavoski credits New Jersey’s location as the key to its mastery of the form. “It was just the perfect place to manufacture the diners,” she says. “We would ship them wherever we needed to by sea.”

VISIT “Icons of American Culture: History of New Jersey Diners,” running through June 2017 at The Cornelius House / Middlesex County Museum in Piscataway, New Jersey

GOOD FOOD, GOOD TUNES

Suzanne Vega’s 1987 song “Tom’s Diner” is probably best known for its frequently sampled “doo doo doo doo” melody (旋律) rather than its diner-related lyrics. Technically, it’s not even really about a diner — the setting is New York City’s Tom’s Restaurant, which Vega frequented when she was studying at Barnard. Vega used the word “diner” instead because it “sings better that way,” she told The New York Times. November 18 has since been called Tom’s Diner Day, because on that day in 1981, the New York Post’s front page was a story about the death of actor William Holden. In her song Vega sings: “I Open / Up the paper / There’s a story / Of an actor / Who had died / While he was drinking.”

LISTEN “Tom’s Diner” by Suzanne Vega

MEET THE DINER ANTHROPOLOGIST

Richard J.S. Gutman has been called the “Jane Goodall of diners” (he even consulted on Barry Levinson’s 1982 film, Diner). His book, American Diner: Then Now, traces the evolution of the “night lunch wagon,” set up by Walter Scott in 1872, to the early 1920s, when the diner got its name (adapted from “dining car’’), and on through the 1980s. Gutman has his own diner facilities (floor plans, classic white mugs, a cashier booth); 250 of these items are part of an exhibit in Rhode Island.

READ American Diner: Then & Now (John Hopkins University Press)

VISIT “Diners: Still Cooking in the 21st Century,” currently running at the Culinary Arts Museum at Johnson & Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island

1In what way is a diner different from a coffee shop?

A. Its location. B. Its management.

C. From what it is built. D. Where it is constructed.

2What do we know about Vega’s 1987 song “Tom’s Diner”?

A. It warns people not to drink. B. It was inspired by Tom’s Diner Day.

C. Its melody is preferred to its lyrics. D. Its original title was Tom’s Restaurant.

【题目】I’m told that during an international game of chess, many beautiful moves could be made on a chessboard. In a decisive ______ in which Marshall was matched with a Russian master player, he found his queen under serious attack. There were several ways of ______, and since the queen is the most ______ piece, the audience thought Marshall would ______ move his queen to safety.

Deep in thought, Marshall used all his time to ______ the condition. And then, he ______ his queen, paused, and placed it down on the most ______ square of all — a square from which the queen could be ______ by any one of three enemy pieces.

Marshall had sacrificed (牺牲) his queen — an unthinkable move. Everyone else was ______.

Then, the Russian and the players realized that Marshall had actually made a ______ move. It was clear that no matter how the game was taken, the Russian would soon be in a losing ______. Seeing this, the Russian ______ his defeat.

When the audience ______ from the shock of Marshall’s daring, they showered the chessboard with money. Marshall had achieved ______ in a very unusual and daring way — he had ______ by sacrificing the queen.

To me, it is not important that Marshall won,______ what counts is that he had ______ standard thinking to make such a ______. He had looked further the usual patterns of play and had been ______ to consider an imaginative risk on the basis of his judgment alone. No matter how the game ______, Marshall was the winner.

1A. experience B. step C. game D. situation

2A. support B. attack C. protection D. escape

3A. powerful B. attractive C. reliable D. valuable

4A. regularly B. naturally C. frequently D. quietly

5A. check B. recognize C. consider D. improve

6A. picked up B. cared about C. turned to D. watched over

7A. doubtful B. useless C. peaceful D. dangerous

8A. ignored B. caught C. replaced D. discovered

9A. frightened B. shocked C. determined D. excited

10A. wise B. wrong C. calm D. difficult

11A. journey B. action C. fight D. position

12A. settled B. rescued C. admitted D. expected

13A. recovered B. suffered C. came D. removed

14A. prize B. victory C. progress D. attention

15A. competed B. performed C. arisen D. won

16A. as B. so C. but D. or

17A. gone through B. broken with C. relied on D. dealt with

18A. joke B. blow C. surprise D. move

19A. willing B. active C. serious D. worried

20A. started B. changed C. ended D. continued

【题目】阅读理解
Visitors to Britain are sometimes surprised to learn that newspapers there have such a large circulation (发行 ). The “Daily Mirror “ and the “Daily express” both sell about four million copies everyday. British families generally buy a newspaper every morning and two or three on Sundays.
Besides the national papers, there is, however, another branch of the British press which sells almost as many copies. Local newspapers have a weekly circulation of 13 million. Almost every town and county area has one. Nearly all of them hold their own financially (财政 ) and many of them are very profitable (赚钱的 ) .
These papers are written almost entirely for readers interested in local events-births, weddings, deaths, council (地方会议 ) meetings and sports. Editors prefer to rely on people who know the district well. A great deal of local news is regularly supplied by clubs and churches in the neighborhood and it does not get out to date as quickly as national news.
The editors must never forget that the success of any newspaper depends on advertising ( 广告) . He is usually anxious to keep the good will of local businessmen for this reason. But if the newspaper is well written and the news items have been carefully chosen to draw local readers, the business men are grateful for the opportunity (机会 ) to keep their products in the public eyes.
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A.there are so many local newspapers there
B.local papers should have a circulation of four million
C.the “Daily Mirror “ and “Daily Express” sell as many as 4 million copies every day
D.British newspapers are so widely read
(2)Local newspapers have ______.
A.a circulation as large as that of national newspapers
B.a daily circulation of 13 million
C.a slightly smaller circulation
D.an even larger circulation
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A.advertisements
B.interesting reports
C.a great deal of national news
D.an excellent sales manager
(4)Which of the following is true?
A.All the local newspapers are very profitable.
B.Local newspapers have a weekly circulation of 14 million
C.Local readers are much interested in local news
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