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2018年12月大學(xué)英語(yǔ)六級(jí)真題試卷(一)
PartIWriting(30minutes)
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutes
towriteanessayonhowtobalancejob
responsibilitiesandpersonalinterests.Youcancite
examplestoillustrateyourviews.Youshouldwriteat
least150wordsbutnomorethan200words.
PartIIListeningComprehension(30minutes)
SectionA
Directions:Inthissection,youwillheartwolong
conversations.Attheendofeachconversation,you
willhearfourquestions.Boththeconversationandthe
questionswillbespokenonlyonce.Afteryouheara
question,youmustchoosethebestanswerfromthefour
choicesmarkedA),B),C)andD).Thenmarkthe
correspondingletteronAnswerSheet1withasingle
linethroughthecentre.
Questions1to4arebasedontheconversationyouhave
justheard.
1.A)Itcanbenefitprofessionalsand
non-professionalsalike.
B)Itliststhevariouschallengesphysicistsare
confronting.
C)Itdescribeshowsomemysteriesofphysicswere
solved.
D)Itisoneofthemostfascinatingphysicsbooksever
written.
2.A)Physicists'contributiontohumanity.
B)Storiesaboutsomefemalephysicists.
C)Historicalevolutionofmodernphysics.
D)Women7schangingattitudestophysics.
3.A)Byexposingalotofmythsinphysics.
B)Bydescribingherownlifeexperiences.
C)Byincludinglotsoffascinatingknowledge.
D)Bytellinganecdotesaboutfamousprofessors.
4.A)Itavoidsdetailingabstractconceptsofphysics.
B)Itcontainsalotofthought-provokingquestions.
C)Itdemonstrateshowtheycanbecomephysicists.
D)Itprovidesexperimentstheycandothemselves.
Questions5to8arebasedontheconversationyouhave
justheard.
5.A)Heistoobusytofinishhisassignmentintime.
B)Hedoesnotknowwhatkidoftopictowriteon.
C)Hedoesnotunderstandtheprofessor7s
instructions.
D)Hehasnoideahowtoproceedwithhisdissertation.
6.A)Itistoobroad.
B)Itisoutdated.
C)Itischallenging.
D)Itisinteresting.
7.A)Biography.
B)Nature.
C)Photography.
D)Beauty.
8.A)Improvehiscumulativegrade.
B)Develophisreadingability.
C)Sticktothetopicassigned.
D)Listtheparametersfirst.
SectionB
Directions:Inthissection,youwillheartwopassages.
Attheendofeachpassage,youwillhearthreeorfour
questions.Boththepassageandthequestionswillbe
spokenonlyonce.Afteryouhearaquestion,youmust
choosethebestanswerfromthefourchoicesmarkedA),
B),C)andD).Thenmarkthecorrespondingletter
onAnswerSheet1withasinglelinethroughthe
centre.
Questions9to11arebasedonthepassageyouhavejust
heard.
9.A)TheunprecedentedhightemperatureinGreenland.
B)ThecollapseoficeonthenortherntipofGreenland.
C)TheunusualclodspellintheArcticareainOctober.
D)TherapidchangeofArctictemperaturewithinaday.
10.A)Ithascreatedatotallynewclimatepattern.
B)Itwillposeaseriousthreattomanyspecies.
C)Ittypicallyappearsaboutonceeverytenyears.
D)Ithaspuzzledtheclimatescientistsfordecades.
11.A)ExtinctionofArcticwildlife.
B)IcelesssummersintheArctic.
C)Emigrationofindigenouspeople.
D)Betterunderstandingofecosystems.
Questions12to15arebasedonthepassageyouhave
justheard.
12.A)Agoodstart.
B)Adetailedplan.
C)Astrongdetermination.
D)Ascientificapproach.
13.A)Mostpeoplegetenergizedafterasufficient
rest.
B)Mostpeopletendtohavefinitesourceofenergy.
C)Itisvitaltotakebreaksbetweendemandingmental
tasks.
D)Itismostimportanttohaveconfidenceinone's
willpower.
14.A)Theycouldkeeponworkinglonger.
B)Theycoulddomorechallengingtasks.
C)Theyfounditeasiertofocusonworkathand.
D)Theyheldmorepositiveattitudestowardlife.
15.A)Theyarepartoftheirnature.
B)Theyaresubjecttochange.
C)Theyarerelatedtoculture.
D)Theyarebeyondcontrol.
SectionC
Directions:Inthissection,youwillhearthree
recordingsoflecturesortalksfollowedbythreeor
fourquestions.Therecordingswillbeplayedonlyonce
Afteryouhearaquestion,youmustchoosethebest
answerfromthefourchoicesmarkedA),B),C)andD).
ThenmarkthecorrespondingletteronAnswerSheet
1withasinglelinethroughthecentre.
Questions16to18arebasedontherecordingyouhave
justheard.
16.A)Abouthalfofcurrentjobsmightbeautomated.
B)Thejobsofdoctorsandlawyerswouldbethreatened.
C)Thejobsmarketisbecomingsomewhatunpredictable.
D)Machinelearningwouldprovedisruptiveby2013.
17.A)Theyarewidelyapplicableformassiveopen
onlinecourses.
B)Theyarenowbeingusedbynumeroushighschool
teachers.
C)Theycouldreadasmanyas10,000essaysinasingle
minute.
D)Theycouldgradehigh-schoolessaysjustlikehuman
teacher.
18.A)Itneedsinstructionsthroughouttheprocess.
B)Itdosepoorlyonfrequency,high-volumetasks.
C)Ithastorelyonhugeamountsofpreviousdata.
D)Itisslowwhenitcomestotrackingnovelthings.
Questions19to22arebasedontherecordingyouhave
justheard.
19.A)Theengineeringproblemswithsolarpower.
B)Thegenerationofsteamwiththelatesttechnology.
C)Theimportanceofexploringnewenergysources.
D)Thetheoreticalaspectsofsustainableenergy.
20.A)Drivetrainswithsolarenergy.
B)Upgradethecity'strainfacilities.
C)Buildanewten-kilometrerailwayline.
D)Cut-downthecity'senergyconsumption.
21.A)Buildatankforkeepingcalciumoxide.
B)Findanewmaterialforstoringenergy.
C)Recoversuper-heatedsteam.
D)Collectcarbondioxidegas.
22.A)Thelackofsupervisionbyboththenationand
localgovernment.
B)Theimpactofthecurrenteconomicscrisisathome
andabroad.
C)Thepoormanagementofdaycentresandhomehelp
services.
D)Thepoorrelationbetweennationalheathandsocial
careservices.
Questions23to25arebasedontherecordingyouhave
justheard.
23.A)Itwasmainlyprovidedbyvoluntaryservices.
B)Itmainlycaterstotheneedofprivileged.
C)Itcalledforasufficientnumberofvolunteers.
D)Ithasdeterioratedoverthepastsixtyyears.
24.A)Theirlongerlifespans.
B)Fewerhomehelpersavailable.
C)Theirpreferenceforprivateservices.
D)Moreofthemsufferingseriousillness.
25.A)Theyareunabletopayforhealthservices.
B)Theyhavelongbeendiscriminatedagainst.
C)Theyarevulnerabletoillnessanddiseases.
D)Theyhavecontributedagreatdealtosociety.
PartJUReadingComprehension(40minutes)
SectionA
Directions:Inthissection,thereisapassagewith
tenblanks.Youarerequiredtoselectonewordforeach
blankfromalistofchoicesgiveninawordbank
followingthepassage.Readthepassagethrough
carefullybeforemakingyourchoices.Eachchoicein
thebankisidentifiedbyaletter.Pleasemarkthe
correspondingletterforeachitemonAnswerSheet
2withasinglelinethroughthecentre.Youmaynot
useanyofthewordsinthebankmorethanonce.
Questions26to35arebasedonthefollowingpassage.
Inwhat'sprobablythecraziestheadlineI'veever
written,I'vereportedthat26inlivestockprotection
arehappeningwithscientistspaintingeyesonthe
buttsofcows.Theexperimentisbasedupontheidea
thatfarmerswho'reprotectingtheirherdfromlions
wouldshootandkilllionsinanefforttoprotecttheir
livestock.Whilethismakesalotofsense,itresults
inmanyliondeathsthat27wouldhavebeenunnecessary.
ResearchersinAustraliahavebeen28andtestinga
methodoftrickerytomakelionsthinktheyarebeing
watchedbythepaintedeyesoncowbutts.
Thisideaisbasedontheprinciplethatlionsandother
29arefarlesslikelytoattackwhentheyfeelthey
arebeingwatched.Asconservationareasbecomesmaller,
lionsareincreasinglycomingintocontactwithhuman
populations,whichareexpandingtothe30ofthese
protectedareas.
Effortslikepaintingeyesoncowbuttsmayseemcrazy
atfirst,buttheycouldmakeactualheadwayinthe
fightforconservation."Ifthemethodworks,itcould
providefarmersinBotswana—and31-withalow-cost,
sustainabletooltoprotecttheirlivestock,andaway
tokeeplionssafefrombeingkilled.”
Lionsare32ambush(埋伏)hunters,sowhentheyfeel
theirpreyhas33them,theyusuallygiveuponthehunt.
Researchersare34testingtheirideaonaselectherd
ofcattle.Theyhavepaintedhalfofthecowswitheyes
andlefttheotherhalfasnormal.Throughsatellite
trackingofboththeherdandthelionsinthearea,
theywillbeableto35iftheirpsychologicaltrickery
willworktohelpkeepfarmersfromshootinglions.
A)advancesotherwise
B)boundaries'^J)predators
C)challengingK)primarily
D)currentlyL)retorted
E)determineM)spotted
F)devisingN)testimonies
G)elsewhereO)wrestle
H)nevertheless
SectionB
Directions:Inthissection,youaregoingtoreada
passagewithtenstatementsattachedtoit.Each
statementcontainsinformationgiveninoneofthe
paragraphs.Identifytheparagraphfromwhichthe
informationisderived.Youmaychooseaparagraphmore
thanonce.Eachparagraphismarkedwithaletter.
Answerthequestionsbymarkingthecorresponding
letteronAnswerSheet2.
ResilienceIsAboutHowYouRecharge,NotHowYouEndure
[A]Asconstanttravelersandparentsofa2-year-old,
wesometimesfantasizeabouthowmuchworkwecando
whenoneofusgetsonaplane,undistractedbyphones,
friends,ormovies.Weracetogetallourgroundwork
done:packing,goingthroughsecurity,doinga
last-minuteworkcall,callingeachother,then
boardingtheplane.Then,whenwetrytohavethat
amazingworksessioninflight,wegetnothingdone.
Evenworse,afterrefreshingouremailorreadingthe
samestudiesoverandover,wearetooexhaustedwhen
welandtosoldieronwith(繼續(xù)處理)theemailsthat
haveinevitablystillpiledup.
[B]whyshouldflyingdepleteus?We'rejustsitting
theredoingnothing.Whycan'twebetougher,more
resilient(有復(fù)原力的)anddeterminedinourworkso
wecanaccomplishallofthegoalswesetforourselves?
Basedonourcurrentresearch,wehavecometorealize
thattheproblemisnotourhecticscheduleortheplane
travelitself;theproblemcomesfromamisconception
ofwhatitmeanstoberesilient,andtheresulting
impactofoverworking.
[C]Weoftentakeamilitaristic,“tough“approach
toresilienceanddeterminationlikeaMarinepulling
himselfthroughthemud,aboxergoingonemoreround,
orafootballplayerpickinghimselfupofftheground
foronemoreplay.Webelievethatthelongerwetough
itout,thetougherweare,andthereforethemore
successfulwewillbe.However,thisentireconception
isscientificallyinaccurate.
[D]Theverylackofarecoveryperiodisdramatically
holdingbackourcollectiveabilitytoberesilientand
successful.Researchhasfoundthatthereisadirect
correlationbetweenlackofrecoveryandincreased
incidenceofhealthandsafetyproblems.Andlackof
recovery一whetherbydisruptingsleepwiththoughts
ofworkorhavingcontinuouscognitivearousalby
watchingourphones一iscostingourcompanies$62
billionayearinlostproductivity.
[E]Andjustbecauseworkstops,itdoesn'tmeanwe
arerecovering.We“stop"worksometimesat5pm,but
thenwespendthenightwrestlingwithsolutionstowork
problems,talkingaboutourworkoverdinner,and
fallingasleepthinkingabouthowmuchworkwe'11do
tomorrow.Inastudyjustreleased,researchersfrom
Norwayfoundthat7.8%ofNorwegianshavebecome
workaholics(工作狂).Thescientistsciteadefinition
“workaholism"as"beingoverlyconcernedaboutwork,
drivenbyanuncontrollableworkmotivation,and
investingsomuchtimeandeffortinworkthatit
impairsotherimportantlifeareas.”
[F]Webelievethatthenumberofpeoplewhofitthat
definitionincludesthemajoriyofAmericanworkers,
whichpromptedustobeginastudyofworkaholismin
theU.S.Ourstudywillusealargecorporatedataset
fromamajormedicalcompanytoexaminehowtechnology
extendsourworkinghoursandthusinterfereswith
necessarycognitiverecovery,resultinginhugehealth
carecostsandturnovercostsforemployers.
[G]Themisconceptionofresilienceisoftenbredfrom
anearlyage.Parentstryingtoteachtheirchildren
resiliencemightcelebrateahighschoolstudent
stayingupuntil3amtofinishasciencefairproject.
Whatadistortionofresilience!Aresilientchildis
awell-restedone.Whenanexhaustedstudentgoesto
school,heriskshurtingeveryoneontheroadwithhis
impaireddriving;hedoesn'thavethecognitive
resourcestodowellonhisEnglishtest;hehaslower
self-controlwithhisfriends;andathome,heismoody
withhisparents.Overworkandexhaustionarethe
oppositeofresilienceandthebadhabitsweacquire
whenwe'reyoungonlymagnifywhenwehitthe
workforce.
[H]AsJimLoehrandTonySchwartzhavewritten,ifyou
havetoomuchtimeintheperformancezone,youneed
moretimeintherecoveryzone,otherwiseyourisk
burnout.Gatheringyourresourcesto“tryhard”
requiresburningenergyinordertoovercomeyour
currentlylowarousallevel.Italsoworsensexhaustion.
Thusthemoreimbalancedwebecomeduetooverworking,
themorevaluethereisinactivitiestheallowusto
returntoastateofbalance.Thevalueofarecovery
periodrisesinproportiontotheamountofwork
requiredofus.
[I]Sohowdowerecoverandbuildresilience?Most
peopleassumethatifyoustopdoingatasklike
answeringemailsorwrithingapaper,yourbrainwill
naturallyrecover,sothatwhenyoustartagainlater
inthedayorthenextmorning,you'11haveyourenergy
back.Butsurelyeveryonereadingthishashadtimes
whenyoulieinbedforhours,unabletofallasleep
becauseyourbrainsisthinkingaboutwork.Ifyoulie
inbedforeighthours,youmayhaverested,butyou
canstillfeelexhaustedthenextday.That'sbecause
restandrecoveryarenotthesamething.
[J]Ifyou'retryingtobuildresilienceatwork,you
needadequateinternalandexternalrecoveryperiods.
AsresearchersZijlstra,CropleyandRydstedtwritein
their2014paper:uInternalrecoveryreferstothe
shorterperiodsofrelaxationthattakeplacewithin
theframesoftheworkdayortheworksettinginthe
formofshortscheduledorunscheduledbreaks,by
shiftingattentionorchangingtootherworktaskswhen
thementalorphysicalresourcesrequiredforthe
initialtaskaretemporarilydepletedorexhausted.
Externalrecoveryreferstoactionsthattakeplace
outsideofwork一e.g.inthefreetimebetweenthework
days,andduringweekends,holidaysorvacations."If
afterworkyouliearoundonyourbedandgetirritated
bypoliticalcommentaryonyourphoneorgetstressed
thinkingaboutdecisionsabouthowtorenovateyour
home,yourbrainhasnotreceivedabreakfromhigh
mentalarousalstates.Ourbrainsneedarestasmuch
asourbodiesdo.
[K]Ifyoureallywanttobuildresilience,youcan
startbystrategicallystopping.Giveyourselfthe
resourcestobetoughbycreatinginternalandexternal
recoveryperiods.AmyBlanksondescribeshowto
strategicallystopduringthedaybyusingtechnology
tocontroloverworking.Shesuggestsdownloadingthe
InstantorMomentappstoseehowmanytimesyouturn
onyourphoneeachday.Youcanalsouseappslike
OfftimeorUnpluggedtocreatetechfreezonesby
strategicallyschedulingautomaticairplanemodes.The
averagepersonturnsontheirphone150timeseveryday.
Ifeverydistractiontookonly1minute,thatwould
accountfor2.5hoursaday.
[L]Inaddition,youcantakeacognitivebreakevery
90minutestochargeyourbatteries.Trytonothave
lunchatyourdesk,butinsteadspendtimeoutsideor
withyourfriends一nottalkingaboutwork.Takeallof
yourpaidtimeoff,whichnotonlygivesyourecovery
periods,butraisesyourproductivityandlikelihood
ofpromotion.
MAsforus,we'vestartedusingourplanetimeas
awork-freezone,andthustimetodipintotherecovery
phase.Theresultshavebeenfantastic.Weareusually
tiredalreadybythetimewegetonaplane,andthe
crowdedspaceandunstableinternetconnectionmake
workmorechallenging.Now,insteadofswimming
upstream,werelax,sleep,watchmovies,orlistento
music.Andwhenwegetofftheplane,insteadofbeing
depleted,wefeelrecoveredandreadytoreturntothe
performancezone.
36.Ithasbeenfoundthatinadequaterecoveryoften
leadstopoorhealthandaccidents.
37.Mentalrelaxationismuchneeded,justasphysical
relaxationis.
38.Adequaterestnotonlyhelpsonerecover,butalso
increasesone'sworkefficiency.
39.Theauthoralwayshasahectictimebeforetaking
aflight.
40.Recoverymaynottakeplaceevenifoneseemsto
havestoppedworking.
41.Itisadvisedthattechnologybeusedtoprevent
peoplefromoverworking.
42.Contrarytopopularbelief,restdoesnotequal
recovery.
43.Theauthorhascometoseethathisproblemresults
fromamisunderstandingofthemeaningofresilience.
44.People'sdistortedviewaboutresiliencemayhave
developedfromtheirupbringing.
45.Peopletendtothinkthemoredeterminedtheyare,
thegreatertheirsuccesswillbe.
SectionC
Directions:Thereare2passagesinthissection.Each
passageisfollowedbysomequestionsorunfinished
statements.Foreachofthemtherearefourchoices
markedA),B),C)andD).Youshoulddecideonthebest
choiceandmarkthecorrespondingletteronAnswer
Sheet2withasinglelinethroughthecentre.
PassageOne
Questions46to50arebasedonthefollowingpassage.
Childrenwithattentionproblemsinearlychildhood
were40%lesslikelytograduatefromhighschool,says
anewstudyfromDukeUniversity.
Thestudyincluded386kindergartenersfromschoolsin
theFastTrackProject,amulti-siteclinicaltrialin
theU.S.thatin1991begantrackinghowchildren
developedacrosstheirlives.
Withthisstudy,researchersexaminedearlyacademic
attentionandsocio-emotionalskillsandhoweach
contributedtoacademicsuccessintoyoungadulthood.
Theyfoundthatearlyattentionskillswerethemost
consistentpredictorofacademicsuccess,andthat
likabilitybypeersalsohadamodesteffectonacademic
performance.
Byfifthgrade,childrenwithearlyattention
difficultieshadlowergradesandreadingachievement
scoresthantheirpeers.Asfifth-graders,children
withearlyattentionproblemsobtainedaveragereading
scoresatleast3%lowerthantheircontemporaries?
andgradesatleast8%lowerthanthoseoftheirpeers.
ThiswasaftercontrollingforIQ,socio-economic
statusandacademicskillsatschoolentry.
Althoughthesemaynotseemlikelargeeffects,the
impactofearlyattentionproblemscontinued
throughoutthechildren'sacademiccareers.Lower
readingachievementscoresandgradesinfifthgrade
contributedtoreducedgradesinmiddleschooland
therebycontributedtoa40%lowerhighschool
graduationrate.
“Thechildrenweidentifiedashavingattention
difficultieswerenotdiagnosedwithattentiondeficit
hyperactivitydisorder(注意力缺乏多動(dòng)癥)(ADHD),
althoughsomemayhavehadthedisorder.Ourfindings
suggestthatevenmoremodestattentiondifficulties
canincreasetheriskofnegativeacademicoutcomes,“
saidDavidRabiner,anassociatedeanofDuke's
TrinityCollegeofArts&Sciences,whoseresearchhas
focusedonADHDandinterventionstoimproveacademic
performanceinchildrenwithattentiondifficulties.
Socialacceptancebypeersinearlychildhoodalso
predictedgradesinfifthgrade,Childrennotasliked
bytheirfirst-gradepeershadslightlylowergrades
infifthgrade,whilethosewithhighersocial
acceptancehadhighergrades.
“Thisstudyshowstheimportanceofso-called
'non-cognitive'orsoftskillsincontributingto
children'spositivepeerrelationships,which,in
turn,contributetotheiracademicsuccesss,“said
KennethDodge,directoroftheDukeCenterforChild
andFamilyPolicy.
Theresultshighlighttheneedtodevelopeffective
earlyinterventionstohelpthosewithattention
problemsstayontrackacademicallyandforeducators
toencouragepositivepeerrelationships,the
researcherssaid.
“We'relearningthatstudentsuccessrequiresamore
comprehensiveapproach,onethatincorporatesnotonly
academicskillsbutalsosocial,self-regulatoryand
attentionskills,“Dodgesaid."Ifweneglectanyof
theseareas,thechild'sdevelopmentlags.Ifwe
attendtotheseareas,achild'ssuccessmayreinforce
itselfwithpositivefeedbackloops.”
46.WhatisthefocusofthenewstudyfromDuke
University?
A)Thecontributortochildren,searlyattention.
B)Thepredictorsofchildren'sacademicsuccess.
C)Thefactorsthataffectchildren'semotional
well-being.
D)Thedeterminantsofchildren'sdevelopmentof
socialskills.
47.Howdidtheresearchersensurethattheirfindings
arevalid?
A)Byattachingequalimportancetoallpossible
variablesexamined.
B)Bycollectingasmanytypicalsamplesaswere
necessary.
C)Bypreventingthemfrombeingaffectedbyfactors
notunderstudy.
D)Byfocusingonthefamilybackgroundofchildren
beingstudied.
48.WhatdowelearnfromthefindingsoftheDukestudy?
A)Modeststudentsaregenerallymoreattentivethan
theircontemporaries.
B)Therearemorechildrenwithattentiondifficulties
thanpreviouslythought.
C)Attentiondeficithyperactivitydisorderaccounts
formostacademicfailures.
D)Children7sacademicperformancemaysufferfrom
evenslightinattention.
49.WhatdoestheDukestudyfindaboutchildrenbetter
acceptedbypeers?
A)Theydobetteracademically.
B)Theyareeasytogetonwith.
C)Theyareteachers'favorites.
D)Theycarelessaboutgrades.
50.WhatcanweconcludefromtheDukestudy?
A)Children'ssuccessisrelatedtotheirlearning
environment.
B)Schoolcurriculumshouldcoveragreatervarietyof
subjects.
C)Socialskillsareplayingakeyroleinchildren's
development.
D)Anall-roundapproachshouldbeadoptedinschool
education.
PassageTwo
Questions51to55arebasedonthefollowingpassage.
OnJan.9,2007,SteveJobsformallyannouncedApple's
urevolutionarymobilephone”—adevicethat
combinedthefunctionalityofaniPod,phoneand
Internetcommunicationintoasingleunit,navigated
bytouch.
Itwasahugemilestoneinthedevelopmentof
smartphones,whicharenowownedbyamajorityof
Americanadultsandareincreasinglycommonacrossthe
globe.
Assmartphoneshavemultiplied,sohavequestionsabout
theirimpactonhowweliveandhowwework.Oftenthe
advantagesofconvenient,mobiletechnologyareboth
obviousandtakenforgranted,leavingmoresubtle
topicsforconcerneddiscussion:Aresmartphones
disturbingchildren'ssleep?Isaninabilitytoget
awayfromworkhavinganegativeimpactonhealth?And
whataretheimplicationsforprivacy?
Buttoday,onthe10thanniversaryoftheiPhone,let's
takeamomenttoconsideralessobviousadvantage:the
potentialforsmartphonetechnologytorevolutionize
behavioralscience.That'sbecause,forthefirsttime
inhumanhistory,alargeproportionofthespeciesis
incontinuouscontactwithtechnologythatcanrecord
keyfeaturesofanindividual?sbehaviorand
environment.
Researchershavealreadybeguntousesmartphonesin
socialscientificresearch,eithertoquerypeople
regularlyastheyengageintheirnormalliveorto
recordactivityusingthedevice'sbuilt-insensors
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