来我首页 | 新闻中心 | 考研主站 | 考研数学 | 考研英语 | 考研政治 | 考研图片 | 社区论坛 | 考研问吧 | 同路期刊 | 教育书城
英语主站 | 英语四级 | 英语六级 | 商务英语 | 外语考试 | 托福考试 | 雅思考试 | 司法考试 | 教育博客 | 考研资料 | 就业职场

注册论坛会员 注册资源站会员

 
 
考研英语冲刺30天第22天:阅读模拟练习二
 
08-03-20 11:50:25 来源:腾讯 作者:

第二十二天:阅读模拟练习二


今天的结束语是:Reading makes a full man(阅读使人充实)。


Text 3

Each year, 1,400 high-school students from more than 40 countries are invited to compete in the prestigious Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel ISEF), the world’s largest precollege science contest. The select group of young scientists is chosen from the several million students who compete in local and regional science fairs throughout the year. Participants compete for $3 million in scholarships and prizes, presenting projects in 15 categories like medicine, biochemistry, computer science and zoology. Earning top honors isn’t the only goal for contestants. Nineteen percent (or 274) of the finalists at the 2005 competition held last month have already begun the process to patent their projects.

Ammem Abdulrasool, a senior at the Illinois Junior Academy of Science, won top honors at this year’s Intel ISEF for his project, “Prototype for Autonomy: Pathway for the Blind.” He walked away with $70,000 in prize money and a free trip to October’s Nobel Prize ceremony. Abdulrasool developed technology that allows visually impaired individuals to navigate themselves from one location to another by using the Global Positioning System. Individuals wear a half-kilo Walkman-size device, a bracelet on each arm and a pair of earphones. After entering a starting and ending location into a personal digital assistant (PDA), they are guided with verbal commands that tell them when and in what direction to turn. Simultaneously, a bracelet vibrates signaling the correct direction. To test his device, Abdulrasool recruited 36 blind adults and asked them to visit five landmarks in his neighborhood. The navigational tool saved people an average of 26 minutes in travel time and reduced the number of errors (wrong turns and missed locations). “Looking at how hard it was for them to travel and how they were dependent on everyone else motivated me to do something,” he said. Abdulrasool hopes are applying for a patent and then plan to market the product commercially.

In the fair’s 56-year history, a number of projects have been implemented for commercial use. Michael Nyberg, a 2001 competitor, hoped to reduce the number of West Nile virus infections through acoustics. With a bucket of mosquito larvae and a sound generator, Nyberg discovered that a 24 kHz frequency resonated with the natural frequency of mosquitoes’ internal organs: larvae that absorbed the acoustic energy would explode. His sound-emitting device, Larvasonic, is now sold online (www.larvasonic.com). Tiffany Clark, a 1999 competitor, found evidence that bacteria produced the methane gas found inside coal seams in Wyoming’s Powder River Basin. This suggested that injecting nutrients into coal seams might provide an unlimited supply of natural gas. A Denver-based technology firm is now continuing Clark’s high-school research. And someday soon, blind people ar

9 7 3 1 2 3 4 4 8 :

责任编辑:gaoyan

相关新闻
精彩推荐
 
网站精华
 
 

下载《同路》网络版期刊或订阅最新

关于我们 | 广告服务 | 隐私声明 | 人员招聘 | 联系我们 | 合作链接 | 渝ICP备06004721号

来我网络 版权所有