(A)
Procrastination is a well-known and serious behavioral problem involving both practical and psychological implications. Taxpayers commonly put off submitting their annual returns until the last minute, risking mathematical errors in their frenzy to file. Lawmakers notoriously dawdle and filibuster before enacting sometimes rash and ill-advised legislation at the eleventh hour. And, students burn the midnight oil to get their term papers submitted before the impending deadline, precluding proper polishing and proofreading. For these reasons, we are cautioned not to procrastinate: Don’t put off until tomorrow what you can do today. He who hesitates is lost. Procrastination is the thief of time.
However, the opposite of procrastination can also be a serious problem 一 a tendency we call “pre-crastination.” Pre-crastination is the inclination to complete tasks quickly just for the sake of getting things done sooner rather than later. People answer emails immediately rather than carefully contemplating their replies. People pay bills as soon as they arrive, thus failing to collect interest income. And, people grab items when they first enter the grocery store, carry them to the back of the store, pick up more groceries at the back, and then return to the front of the store to pay and exit, thus toting the items farther than necessary. Familiar adages also warm of the hazards of pre-crastinating: Measure twice, cut once. Marry in haste, repent at leisure. Look before you leap.
We first found striking evidence of pre-crastination in a laboratory study exploring the economics of effort. College students were asked to carry one of a pair of buckets: one on the left side of a walkway and one on the right side of the same walkway. The students were instructed to carry whichever bucket seemed easier to take to the end of the walkway. We expected students to choose the bucket closer to the end because it would have to be carried a shorter distance. Surprisingly, they preferred the bucket closer to the starting point, actually carrying it farther. When asked why they did so, most students said something like, “I wanted to get the task done as soon as possible,” even though this choice did not in fact complete the ask sooner.
Nine experiments involving more than 250 students failed to reveal what might have been so compelling about picking up the nearer bucket. Although some hidden benefit may await discovery, a simple hypothesis is that getting something done, or coming closer to getting it done, is inherently rewarding. No matter how trivial the achievement, even something as inconsequential as picking up a bucket may serve as its own reward.
Is pre-crastinatio — exhibited by college students, bill payers, e-mailers, and shoppers —a symptom of our harried lives? The other study from our laboratories suggests it is not: that experiment was done with pigeons. The birds could earn food by pecking a touchscreen three times: first, into a square in the center of the screen; second, into the same square or into a square that randomly appeared to the left or right of it; and third, into a side square after a star appeared within it. Critically, food was given after the final peck regardless of whether the second peck struck the center square or the side square where the star would be presented. The pigeons directed their second peck to the side square, hence moving to the goal position as soon as they could even though there was no obvious or extra reward for doing so. Thus, the pigeons pre-crastinated.
What does the passage mainly discuss?
How to Fight Against Campus Violence
Cyberspace, of course, is bigger than a telephone call. Someday even our television sets may be part of cyberspace, transformed into interactive “teleputers”by so-called full-service networks like the ones several cable-TV companies (including Time Warner) are building along the old cable lines, using fiber optics and high-speed switches.
As a computer scientist, Cappos has developed a completely different way to cloud compute.
In typical cloud computing, users connect to a powerful, centralized data center. But Cappos’ cloud is less of a dense thunder-head and more of a fog. His system, called Seattle, connects devices directly to one another in decentralized network, relaying information more quickly than it could through a single, often distant exchange point. “It lets you use a little bit of disk storage, network, memory, and CPU in an isolated, safe way,” he says. Because Seattle allows users to access the Net with foreign IP addresses, it enables developers to view their sites or apps as they would in other countries. That ability is also particularly valuable to individuals who wish to avoid local censorship.
By the end of 2012, Seattle had 20,000 users. Cappos and colleagues are now working on software that could access the sensors in smart phones as well. Scientists could use it to test new apps, such as an earthquake monitor that uses a phone’s accelerometer (加速计)to measure quake intensity. Soon, Cappos hopes to use Seattle to surf the Net from the International Space Station too.
be doomed to
emerge from
access to
acknowledge
afford
1、他们最后承认了他们的实验数据是伪造的。
2、史密斯教授用过那些文章,其中大多数尚未发表。
3、这个项目从一开始就注定要失败。
4、他几乎不能再缺课了。
5、你们的讨论产生了什么结果?
He could hardly start the car, for the batteries were______.
New research challenges the generally accepted belief that substantial ice sheets could not have existed on Earth during past super-warm climate events. The study by researchers(31)Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego provides strong evidence that a glacial ice cap, (32) half the size of the modern day glacial ice(33), existed 91 million years ago (34) a period of intense global warming. This study offers valuable insight (35) current day climate conditions and the environmental mechanisms(36)global sea level rise. The new study examines geochemical and sea level data(37) from marine microfossils(38)on the ocean floor 91 million years ago during the Cretaceous Thermal Maximum. This extreme(39)event in Earth’s history raised tropical ocean temperatures to 35-37°C (95-98.6°F), about 10°C (18°F) warmer than today, thus(40)an intense greenhouse climate.
They waited for more than one hour, but he didn’t______.
Almost all the computers this shop sells are______IBM in the United States.
Her busy work schedule did not allow her to______days______.
The doctor told her to give up the diet_______Vitamin B.
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