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Something incredible is happening in a lab at Duke University’s Center for Neuroengineering--though, at first, it’s hard to see just what it is. A robot arm swings from side to side, eerily lifelike, as if it were trying to snatch invisible flies out of the air. It pivots around and straightens as it extends its mechanical hand. The hand clamp shuts and squeezes for a few seconds, then relaxes its grip and pulls back to shoot out again in a new direction. OK, nothing particularly astonishing here--robot arms, after all, do everything from building our cars to sequencing our DNA. But those robot arms are operated by software; the arm at Duke follows commands of a different sort. To see where those commands are coming from, you have to follow a tangled trail of cables out of the lab and down the hall to another, smaller room. Inside this room sits a motionless macaque monkey (短尾猿). The monkey is strapped in a chair, staring at a computer screen. On the screen a black dot moves from side to side; when it stops, a circle widens around it. You wouldn’t know just from watching, but that dot represents the movements of the arm in the other room. The circle indicates the squeezing of its robotic grip; as the force of the grip increases, the circle widens. In other words, the dot and the circle are responding to the robot arm’s movements, And the arm It’s being directed by the monkey. Did I mention the monkey is motionless Take another look at those cables. They snake into the back of the computer and then out again, terminating in a cap on the monkey’s head, where they receive signals from hundreds of electrodes buried in its brain. The monkey is directing the robot with its thoughts. For decades scientists have pondered, speculated on, and pooh-poohed the possibility of a direct interface between a brain and a machine--only in the late 1990s did scientists start learning enough about the brain and signal-processing to offer glimmers of hope that this science-fiction vision could become reality. Since then, insights into the workings of the brain--how it encodes commands for the body, and how it learns to improve those commands over time--have piled up at an astonishing pace, and the researchers at Duke studying the macaque and the robotic arm are at the leading edge of the technology. "This goes way beyond what’s been done before," says neuroscientist Miguel Nicolelis, co-director of the Center for Neuroengineering. Indeed, the performance of the center’s monkeys suggests that a mind-machine merger could become a reality in humans very soon. Nicolelis and his team are confident that in five years they will be able to build a robot arm that can be controlled by a person with electrodes implanted in his or her brain. Their chief focus is medical--they aim to give people with paralyzed limbs a new tool to make everyday life easier. But the success they and other groups of scientists are achieving has triggered broader excitement in both the public and private sectors. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has already doled out 24 million to various brain-machine research efforts across the United States, the Duke group among them. High on DARPA’s wish list. mind-controlled battle robots, and airplanes that can be flown with nothing more than thought. You were hoping for something a bit closer to home How about a mental telephone that you could use simply by thinking about talking Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage A.Robot arms are rarely used in industrial production.B.Knowledge about human brain and its signal-processing is the basis of brain-machine interface.C.If a patient wants to have a robot arm, he has to have electrodes implanted in his brain.D.This new technology is of great practical meanin

Something incredible is happening in a lab at Duke University’s Center for Neuroengineering--though, at first, it’s hard to see just what it is. A robot arm swings from side to side, eerily lifelike, as if it were trying to snatch invisible flies out of the air. It pivots around and straightens as it extends its mechanical hand. The hand clamp shuts and squeezes for a few seconds, then relaxes its grip and pulls back to shoot out again in a new direction. OK, nothing particularly astonishing here--robot arms, after all, do everything from building our cars to sequencing our DNA. But those robot arms are operated by software; the arm at Duke follows commands of a different sort. To see where those commands are coming from, you have to follow a tangled trail of cables out of the lab and down the hall to another, smaller room. Inside this room sits a motionless macaque monkey (短尾猿). The monkey is strapped in a chair, staring at a computer screen. On the screen a black dot moves from side to side; when it stops, a circle widens around it. You wouldn’t know just from watching, but that dot represents the movements of the arm in the other room. The circle indicates the squeezing of its robotic grip; as the force of the grip increases, the circle widens. In other words, the dot and the circle are responding to the robot arm’s movements, And the arm It’s being directed by the monkey. Did I mention the monkey is motionless Take another look at those cables. They snake into the back of the computer and then out again, terminating in a cap on the monkey’s head, where they receive signals from hundreds of electrodes buried in its brain. The monkey is directing the robot with its thoughts. For decades scientists have pondered, speculated on, and pooh-poohed the possibility of a direct interface between a brain and a machine--only in the late 1990s did scientists start learning enough about the brain and signal-processing to offer glimmers of hope that this science-fiction vision could become reality. Since then, insights into the workings of the brain--how it encodes commands for the body, and how it learns to improve those commands over time--have piled up at an astonishing pace, and the researchers at Duke studying the macaque and the robotic arm are at the leading edge of the technology. "This goes way beyond what’s been done before," says neuroscientist Miguel Nicolelis, co-director of the Center for Neuroengineering. Indeed, the performance of the center’s monkeys suggests that a mind-machine merger could become a reality in humans very soon. Nicolelis and his team are confident that in five years they will be able to build a robot arm that can be controlled by a person with electrodes implanted in his or her brain. Their chief focus is medical--they aim to give people with paralyzed limbs a new tool to make everyday life easier. But the success they and other groups of scientists are achieving has triggered broader excitement in both the public and private sectors. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has already doled out $ 24 million to various brain-machine research efforts across the United States, the Duke group among them. High on DARPA’s wish list. mind-controlled battle robots, and airplanes that can be flown with nothing more than thought. You were hoping for something a bit closer to home How about a mental telephone that you could use simply by thinking about talking Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage A.Robot arms are rarely used in industrial production.B.Knowledge about human brain and its signal-processing is the basis of brain-machine interface.C.If a patient wants to have a robot arm, he has to have electrodes implanted in his brain.D.This new technology is of great practical meanin

题目解答

答案

A

解析

考查要点:本题主要考查学生对文章细节的理解能力,需要结合选项与原文信息进行对比,判断哪一项与文章内容矛盾。

解题核心思路:

  1. 定位选项关键信息:明确每个选项对应文章中的具体描述。
  2. 逐项比对:将选项内容与原文相关段落逐一核对,找出与原文矛盾的选项。
  3. 排除干扰项:注意文章中隐含的逻辑关系,如因果、条件等,避免误判。

破题关键点:

  • 选项A的关键点在于“robot arms are rarely used in industrial production”,需重点关注文章中关于工业机器人应用的描述。
  • 选项C需注意“electrodes implanted in the brain”是否为必要条件,结合文中实验细节判断。

选项分析

选项A

原文对比:
文章第一段提到“robot arms do everything from building our cars to sequencing our DNA”,明确说明工业机器人已被广泛应用。
结论:选项A“robot arms are rarely used in industrial production”与原文矛盾,错误。

选项B

原文对比:
文章指出“scientists started learning enough about the brain and signal-processing to offer glimmers of hope”,强调脑科学和信号处理是脑机接口的基础。
结论:选项B正确。

选项C

原文对比:
文中提到“electrodes implanted in his or her brain”是控制机械臂的必要条件,且实验中猴子头部有电极装置。
结论:选项C正确。

选项D

原文对比:
文章提到技术可用于帮助瘫痪患者(medical focus)和军方开发“mind-controlled battle robots”,说明其实际意义重大。
结论:选项D正确。

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