河南省驻马店市2023-2024学年度金太阳高三年级期末统一考试(24-274C)英语试题

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河南省驻马店市2023-2024学年度金太阳高三年级期末统一考试(24-274C)英语试题正在持续更新,目前2025衡水名师卷答案网为大家整理了相关试题及答案,供大家查缺补漏,高效提升成绩。

REDMI NOTE 12 TURBO24.What does the underlined word"excursions"in the first paragraph mean?A.School hours.C.Short journeys.25.What can we know about the activity?A.It is a tailored project.B.Social activities.D.Sports competitions.C.It takes traditional routes.uerabilities of digital repositories as well Fires,theft,and physical negecare oerlist.26.What impressed Jaydee Lai most?B.It is funded by MGTO.the only major threats archives face:now we must also add ransomware(勒索软件)to theA.The stories behind the historic sitesD.It better suits newcomers.28.What have many libraries and archives focused oneey?A.Building new facilities.B.The expertise of the local guides.C.Expanding digital collectionsB.Researching their records.C.Macao's sustainable practices.29.What impact did the eyberattack against BL have on researchers?D.Collecting historical materialsD.Macao's vibrant cultural life.A.Increased workloads.C.Improved computer skills.27.How does Sherielyn Choi feel about the event mentioned in the text?30.What does paragraph 3mainly talk about?B.Disturbed research plans.D.Reduced research funding.龈A.She feels it can be perfected.A.The challenges faced by libraries and archives.B.She is highly favourable to it.B.The benefits of digitization in preserving records如C.She is surprised about its effect.C.The importance of physical record-keeping methodsD.She expects more challenging activities.D.The long-term battle between degradation and restoration.31.What does the author suggest about the future of digitalotio?CA.They will face new threats different from physical onesOver the past few years,libraries and archives across the world have worked toB.They will become the main source of historical recordsdigitize their resources.Many have been investing heavily in expanding digital collections forC.They will reduce the need for physical archives.their records.A recent attack on the British Library (BL)has raised some questions about it.D.They will require less funding for maintenance.On Oct.28,2023,the British Library's website was hacked,making it nonfunctional forDseveral weeks.The library didn't restore its home page until Dec.19,and it was a monthYou see a woman on the street who looks familiarbut you can't remember how youbefore its basic catalogue was searchable again.The bulk (of the library's onlineknow her.Your brain cannot attach any previous experiences to this person.Hours later,youresources will take much longer to restore,leaving students and scholars with research planssuddenly recall the party at a friend's house where you met her,and you realize who she is.In a new study in mice,researchers have discovered the place in the brain that isacross the world in trouble.Digitization has been a powerful weapon in the battle against both intentiona destrucionresponsible for both types of familiarity-vague (recognition and completerecollection..Both,moreover,are represented by two distinct neural(神经系统的)codes..and the neglect of records.It helped scholars preserve the records while also allowingThe brain's signature for strangers turns out to be simpler than the one used for oldunderstaffed libraries to preserve materials suffering from the degradation ()of neglectfriends-which makes sense,says study coauthor Steven Siegelbaum,given the vastlyItnablesuserstoaserdfrom all over the world,helping themoverm the berdifferent memory requirements for the two relationships."Where you were,what you wereof geography and the s of trave igiti elpshodoothedoing,when you were doing it,who else was there-the memory of a familiar individual is amuch richer memory,"Siegelbaum says."If you're meeting a stranger.there's nothing toThe hack at the British Library,however,exposes the vulnerabilities(易受t打击)ofrecollect."digitiztion.Itforcestaskwhat happenstoourifa yberattack severspast.The action occurs in a small sliver (of a brain region called the hippocampus,our digital reord?e the BL has physical (fmwhd)mknown for its importance in forming memories.The sliver in question,known as CA2,seemsaccess for scholars won't be a mission impossibe But it sstill etremely expevhtto specialize in a certain kind of memory used to recall relationships."The new work reallyemphasizes the importance of this brain area to social processing,at least in mice."saysSerena Dudek,a neuroscientist at the National Institute of Environmental Heath Scienes,2024.07.0421.ihappens if digitized collectionsin other orere cked in themy?swththeBLd prevent our acces to physic bdenigloandreference material.That mens even though the rigin physicdmyswewho was not involved in the study.CA2 is unlikely to act alone in this process because it connects to other brain regions thatmay strugge toeor use them ffiely.And repiring the damnge could requirealso play roles in social learning,memory and behavior,Dudek says.But if the findings inresources that the institutions in question might not have.Digtition has beentrveo for shorbe shedhmice apply to humans,the work could help researchersnv theof socdifficultiesdangersthat threaten pper-based historical reords.But its time to consider thein people.【高二英语第6页(共10页)】·24-568B··24-568B【高二英语第5页(共10页)】
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