Directions: For each blank in the following passage, there are four
words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or
phrase that best fits the context.
Mice are at their best
at night. But a new analysis suggests researchers often test the nightly
creatures during the day, which could alter results and create 1 across various studies, if they record
time-of-day information 2. Scientists assume that waking up lab
mice in the daytime may twist research.
Of the 200 papers
examined in the new study, more than half cither failed to report the timing of
behavioral testing or did so 3.
On the contrary, they found only 20 percent reported 4 testing. The analysis was published in
Neuroscience & Bio-behavioral Reviews.
West Virginia
University neuro-scientist Randy Nelson, the study's lead author, says this is
likely a matter of human 5. "It is easier to get students and
schools to work during the day than at night," Nelson says. But that
advantage 6.
"Time of day not
only impacts the intensity of many 7,
including mice activity, aggressiveness of their behavior, and hormone levels,"
but changes in those factors can only be 8 during certain parts of the daytime cycle,
says University of Wyoming behavioral neuro-scientist William D. Todd. This
means that "failing to report time of day of data collection and tests
makes 9 of results extremely difficult," adds
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center staff scientist Natalia Machado. Neither
Todd nor Machado was involved in the new study.
10,
the study researchers say it is critical that scientists report the timing of
their work and consider the fact that animals' behavioral and physiological
responses can 11 with the hour. As a first step, Nelson says, "obviously,
taking time-of-day into consideration seems like 12 fruit in terms of line assing behavioral
neuroscience research reliability, reproducibility and rigor (严谨性)
University of Calgary
psychologist Michael Antle, who was also not involved in the analysis, says
such differences in how studies are run 13 a "reproducibility crisis" in
science, with other laboratories unable to 14 study results. "Running a study at the
wrong time," he says, "could lead to us completely 15 a finding altogether."
(1)
A .
immobility
B .
originality
C .
inconsistency
D .
credibility
(2)
A .
exclusively
B .
precisely
C .
generally
D .
honestly
(3)
A .
directly
B .
personally
C .
reliably
D .
unclearly
(4)
A .
everyday
B .
quality
C .
physical
D .
nighttime
(5)
A .
security
B .
convenience
C .
intelligence
D .
privacy
(6)
A .
comes at a cost
B .
comes to the point
C .
comes into being
D .
comes to an end
(7)
A .
operations
B .
effects
C .
subjects
D .
variables
(8)
A .
indicated
B .
required
C .
recorded
D .
proposed
(9)
A .
interpretation
B .
expectation
C .
suspicion
D .
distribution
(10)
A .
Vice versa
B .
In
comparison
C .
For example
D .
Therefore
(11)
A .
occur
B .
diversify
C .
improve
D .
vary
(12)
A .
low-hanging
B .
high-demanding
C .
bitter-tasting
D .
long-standing
(13)
A .
belong to
B .
contribute to
C .
result from
D .
go through
(14)
A .
recreate
B .
modify
C .
stimulate
D .
predict
(15)
A .
presenting
B .
examining
C .
missing
D .
confirming
答案:(1)C;(2)A;(3)D;(4)D;(5)B;(6)A;(7)D;(8)C;(9)A;(10)D;(11)D;(12)A;(13)B;(14)A;(15)C;