阅读理解
I've
been writing since before I could write. As a kid, I dictated stories to my
parents. About 12 years ago, I was living in New York City and pursuing a
master's degree in creative writing. For years I'd been suffering vision disorder,
but in New York my symptoms worsened. I became unable to read or write for any
considerable length of time. I tried vision therapy, an overhead projector, a
special pair of glasses — all in vain.
Eventually,
I discovered a computer program for the visually challenged. As I typed, my
words were read aloud by an automated voice. With my screen dimmed (变模糊) to black, I relied entirely
on the automated voice to know what I had written.
Facing
the blank page is worrying, but facing the black page is worse. The dark screen
is a sinkhole that swallows creative hope. Sentences disappear into it like an
astronaut into a black hole. I managed to complete
my
master's degree, but it took me years to adapt to my new reality. The greatest
barrier seemed to be the automated voice, which was like a robot parrot on my
shoulder, and I wanted nothing more than to drive it away. If a pianist were
forced to practice on an untuned piano, would it corrupt his ear over time?
Of
course, I could have quit writing and stopped making myself suffer. But it
honestly never occurred to me—and I'm glad it didn't. Last year, after I told
my story on the radio, I was contacted by VocaliD, a Massachusetts-based
company that created a voice modeled on my own.
The
first time I heard the voice they created, it is so close to my own that the
two are nearly indistinguishable. I've only just begun using this new voice. My
hope is that this will restore a sense of solitude (孤独) to my writing process,
allowing me easier access to that inner space where the imagination can take
over, and I can forget myself, and the real work can begin.
The
black screen still exists — it always will — but the robot parrot has taken
wing.
(1)
A . What happened to the author when pursuing a master's degree in New York?
B . His sight started to fail due to much reading.
C . His eyes couldn't bear long hours of reading.
D . He had to drop out due to his vision disorder.
(2)
What still bothered the author after he got his master's degree?
A . The untuned automated voice.
B . The pet parrot on his shoulder.
C . The computer with a dark screen.
D . The noise from a neighboring pianist.
(3)
How did the author feel when first hearing the voice created by VocaliD?
A . Relaxed.
B . Annoyed.
C . Unmoved.
D . Excited.
(4)
What can we infer from the last paragraph?
A . The automated voice is too annoying to bear.
B . The author can restore his sight to normal.
C . The author starts to enjoy his writing again.
D . It is likely that the technology will improve.
答案: B
A
D
C