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[原始] 4.11上午 740放狗

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11#
发表于 2017-4-11 16:46:44 | 只看该作者
奋斗的金融mmiao 发表于 2017-4-11 16:41
逻辑我做的很赶,我遇到了一道黑脸。基本都失忆了,不好意思哈,我考之前也没有看逻辑的jj ...

恩恩 谢谢~~
12#
发表于 2017-4-11 17:24:17 | 只看该作者
恭喜樓主
請問樓主sc考試有遇到特別印象深刻的考點嗎?
還有請問數學是從1-10題就開始很難嗎?
13#
 楼主| 发表于 2017-4-11 17:48:27 | 只看该作者
xx50824 发表于 2017-4-11 17:24
恭喜樓主
請問樓主sc考試有遇到特別印象深刻的考點嗎?
還有請問數學是從1-10題就開始很難嗎? ...

1-10题慢慢做不难。
SC我后来甚至觉得掉裤,因为很多point 一排除就剩两个选项,我觉得不算难。我考的比较题比较多。
14#
发表于 2017-4-11 18:47:21 | 只看该作者
奋斗的金融mmiao 发表于 2017-4-11 17:48
1-10题慢慢做不难。
SC我后来甚至觉得掉裤,因为很多point 一排除就剩两个选项,我觉得不算难。我考的比 ...

謝謝樓主!
15#
发表于 2017-4-11 20:05:30 | 只看该作者
卤煮,请问你说的那个阅读是不是跟这个很像呀,有没有啥你还记得的考点?

Our need for sleep is somehow tied to our ability to remember. Slumber is known to improve recall in creatures from fruit flies to humans, and the reigning theory among neuroscientists has been that the waves of brain activity during deep sleep reactivate neurons that were triggered during the day, strengthening neuronal connections and cementing them into solid memories. Now Giulio Tononi, a neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin, says sleep scientists have it all wrong: We don't sleep to remember, we sleep to forget.
  About 1,000 times a night, billions of neurons undergo a synchronous one-second burst of non-REM electrical activity. The longer a person has been sleep-deprived, the bigger the initial burst. Throughout the night the bursts become progressively smaller, until they finally disappear completely just before waking. Most researchers interpret this activity as the brain slowly reinforcing synaptic connections that already exist, but Tononi noticed that after each wave, the brain goes completely silent, which never happens when we're awake.
  As we sleep, says Tononi, the brain isn't building but rather downscaling, and these silences between waves play a key role. "Going up and down, up and down, basically all the neurons fire and then all are silent—it's a wonderful way for the brain to tell the synapses to get weaker," Tononi explains. He suspects the progressive weakening allows only the strong connections to survive.
  The theory is unorthodox, but it does make a certain amount of sense. Without the ability to pare away unneeded information as we sleep, our brains would face a serious energy shortage as well as a space crunch: Stronger synapses are typically bigger, and real estate in the brain is precious. By proportionally weakening synapses, the brain ensures that they retain the same strength relative to each other. So when we wake up each morning, all of our synapses are weaker, or have vanished. With them, our smallest memories from each day may be lost forever. Our need for sleep is somehow tied to our ability to remember.
16#
 楼主| 发表于 2017-4-11 20:41:53 | 只看该作者
LLLLLLLSY 发表于 2017-4-11 20:05
卤煮,请问你说的那个阅读是不是跟这个很像呀,有没有啥你还记得的考点?

Our need for sleep is somehow  ...

对对很接近,考场上的原文就是把这段话压缩了~
17#
发表于 2017-4-11 22:14:17 | 只看该作者
恭喜!!
18#
发表于 2017-4-11 22:37:23 | 只看该作者
我也是在武大考场考了三次哈哈,还是尴尬着没有分手orz。。。露珠是18fall吗?
19#
发表于 2017-4-12 00:08:31 | 只看该作者
感谢分享!               
20#
发表于 2017-4-12 00:54:40 | 只看该作者
恭喜lz分手成功~
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