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READING PASSAGE 1

Research using twins

To biomedical researchers all over the world, twins offer a precious opportunity to untangle the influence of genes and the environment - of nature and nurture. Because identical twins come from a single fertilized egg that splits into two, they share virtually the same genetic code. Any differences between them - one twin having younger looking skin, for example - must be due to environmental factors such as less time spent in the sun. Alternatively, by comparing the experiences of identical twins with those of fraternal twins, who come from separate eggs and share on average half their DNA, researchers can quantify the extent to which our genes affect our lives. If identical twins are more similar to each other with respect to an ailment than fraternal twins are, then vulnerability to the disease must be rooted at least in part in heredity.

These two lines of research - studying the differences between identical twins to pinpoint the influence of environment, and comparing identical twins with fraternal ones to measure the role of inheritance - have been crucial to understanding the interplay of nature and nurture in determining our personalities, behavior, and vulnerability to disease.

The idea of using twins to measure the influence of heredity dates back to 1875, when the English scientist Francis Galton first suggested the approach (and coined the phrase 'nature and nurture'). But twin studies took a surprising twist in the 1980s, with the arrival of studies into identical twins who had been separated at birth and reunited as adults. Over two decades 137 sets of twins eventually visited Thomas Bouchard's lab in what became known as the Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart. Numerous tests were carried out on the twins, and they were each asked more than 15,000 questions.

Bouchard and his colleagues used this mountain of data to identify how far twins were affected by their genetic makeup. The key to their approach was a statistical concept called heritability. In broad terms, the heritability of a trait measures the extent to which differences among members of a population can be explained by differences in their genetics. And wherever Bouchard and other scientists looked, it seemed, they found the invisible hand of genetic influence helping to shape our lives.

Lately, however, twin studies have helped lead scientists to a radical new conclusion: that nature and nurture are not the only elemental forces at work. According to a recent field called epigenetics, there is a third factor also in play, one that in some cases serves as a bridge between the environment and our genes, and in others operates on its own to shape who we are.

Epigenetic processes are chemical reactions tied to neither nature nor nurture but representing what researchers have called a 'third component'. These reactions influence how our genetic code is expressed: how each gene is strengthened or weakened, even turned on or off, to build our bones, brains and all the other parts of our bodies.

If you think of our DNA as an immense piano keyboard and our genes as the keys - each key symbolizing a segment of DNA responsible for a particular note, or trait, and all the keys combining to make us who we are - then epigenetic processes determine when and how each key can be struck, changing the tune being played.

One way the study of epigenetics is revolutionizing our understanding of biology is by revealing a mechanism by which the environment directly impacts on genes. Studies of animals, for example, have shown that when a rat experiences stress during pregnancy, it can cause epigenetic changes in a fetus that lead to behavioral problems as the rodent grows up. Other epigenetic processes appear to occur randomly, while others are normal, such as those that guide embryonic cells as they become heart, brain, or liver cells, for example.

Geneticist Danielle Reed has worked with many twins over the years and thought deeply about what twin studies have taught us. 'It's very clear when you look at twins that much of what they share is hardwired,' she says. 'Many things about them are absolutely the same and unalterable. But it's also clear, when you get to know them, that other things about them are different. Epigenetics is the origin of a lot of those differences, in my view.'

Reed credits Thomas Bouchard's work for today's surge in twin studies. 'He was the trailblazer,' she says. 'We forget that 50 years ago things like heart disease were thought to be caused entirely by lifestyle. Schizophrenia was thought to be due to poor mothering. Twin studies have allowed us to be more reflective about what people are actually born with and what's caused by experience.'

Having said that, Reed adds, the latest work in epigenetics promises to take our understanding even further. 'What I like to say is that nature writes some things in pencil and some things in pen,' she says. 'Things written in pen you can't change. That's DNA. But things written in pencil you can. That's epigenetics. Now that we're actually able to look at the DNA and see where the pencil writings are, it's sort of a whole new world.'

READING PASSAGE 2

An Introduction to Film Sound

Though we might think of film as an essentially visual experience, we really cannot afford to underestimate the importance of film sound. A meaningful sound track is often as complicated as the image on the screen, and is ultimately just as much the responsibility of the director. The entire sound track consists of three essential ingredients: the human voice, sound effects and music. These three tracks must be mixed and balanced so as to produce the necessary emphases which in turn create desired effects. Topics which essentially refer to the three previously mentioned tracks are discussed below. They include dialogue, synchronous and asynchronous sound effects, and music.

Let us start with dialogue. As is the case with stage drama, dialogue serves to tell the story and expresses feelings and motivations of characters as well. Often with film characterization the audience perceives little or no difference between the character and the actor. Thus, for example, the actor Humphrey Bogart is the character Sam Spade; film personality and life personality seem to merge. Perhaps this is because the very texture of a performer's voice supplies an element of character. When voice textures fit the performer's physiognomy and gestures, a whole and very realistic persona emerges. The viewer sees not an actor working at his craft, but another human being struggling with life.

It is interesting to note that how dialogue is used and the very amount of dialogue used varies widely among films. For example, in the highly successful science-fiction film 2001, little dialogue was evident, and most of it was banal and of little intrinsic interest. In this way the film-maker was able to portray what Thomas Sobochack and Vivian Sobochack call, in An Introduction to Film, the 'inadequacy of human responses when compared with the magnificent technology created by man and the visual beauties of the universe'.

The comedy Bringing Up Baby, on the other hand, presents practically non-stop dialogue delivered at breakneck speed. This use of dialogue underscores not only the dizzy quality of the character played by Katherine Hepburn, but also the absurdity of the film itself and thus its humor. The audience is bounced from gag to gag and conversation to conversation; there is no time for audience reflection. The audience is caught up in a whirlwind of activity in simply managing to follow the plot. This film presents pure escapism - largely due to its frenetic dialogue.

Synchronous sound effects are those sounds which are synchronized or matched with what is viewed. For example, if the film portrays a character playing the piano, the sounds of the piano are projected. Synchronous sounds contribute to the realism of film and also help to create a particular atmosphere. For example, the 'click' of a door being opened may simply serve to convince the audience that the image portrayed is real, and the audience may only subconsciously note the expected sound. However, if the 'click' of an opening door is part of an ominous action such as a burglary, the sound mixer may call attention to the 'click' with an increase in volume; this helps to engage the audience in a moment of suspense.

Asynchronous sound effects, on the other hand, are not matched with a visible source of the sound on screen. Such sounds are included so as to provide an appropriate emotional nuance, and they may also add to the realism of the film. For example, a film-maker might opt to include the background sound of an ambulance's siren while the foreground sound and image portrays an arguing couple. The asynchronous ambulance siren underscores the psychic injury incurred in the argument; at the same time the noise of the siren adds to the realism of the film by acknowledging the film's city setting.

We are probably all familiar with background music in films, which has become so ubiquitous as to be noticeable in its absence. We are aware that it is used to add emotion and rhythm. Usually not meant to be noticeable, it often provides a tone or an emotional attitude toward the story and/or the characters depicted. In addition, background music often foreshadows a change in mood. For example, dissonant music may be used in film to indicate an approaching (but not yet visible) menace or disaster.

Background music may aid viewer understanding by linking scenes. For example, a particular musical theme associated with an individual character or situation may be repeated at various points in a film in order to remind the audience of salient motifs or ideas.

Film sound comprises conventions and innovations. We have come to expect an acceleration of music during car chases and creaky doors in horror films. Yet, it is important to note as well that sound is often brilliantly conceived. The effects of sound are often largely subtle and often are noted by only our subconscious minds. We need to foster an awareness of film sound as well as film space so as to truly appreciate an art form that sprang to life during the twentieth century - the modern film.

READING PASSAGE 3

'This Marvellous Invention'

A
Of all mankind's manifold creations, language must take pride of place. Other inventions - the wheel, agriculture, sliced bread - may have transformed our material existence, but the advent of language is what made us human. Compared to language, all other inventions pale in significance, since everything we have ever achieved depends on language and originates from it. Without language, we could never have embarked on our ascent to unparalleled power over all other animals, and even over nature itself.

B
But language is foremost not just because it came first. In its own right it is a tool of extraordinary sophistication, yet based on an idea of ingenious simplicity: 'this marvellous invention of composing out of twenty-five or thirty sounds that infinite variety of expressions which, whilst having in themselves no likeness to what is in our mind, allow us to disclose to others its whole secret, and to make known to those who cannot penetrate it all that we imagine, and all the various stirrings of our soul'. This was how, in 1660, the renowned French grammarians of the Port-Royal abbey near Versailles distilled the essence of language, and no one since has celebrated more eloquently the magnitude of its achievement. Even so, there is just one flaw in all these hymns of praise, for the homage to languages unique accomplishment conceals a simple yet critical incongruity. Language is mankind s greatest invention - except, of course, that it was never invented. This apparent paradox is at the core of our fascination with language, and it holds many of its secrets.

C
Language often seems so skillfully drafted that one can hardly imagine it as anything other than the perfected handiwork of a master craftsman. How else could this instrument make so much out of barely three dozen measly morsels of sound? In themselves, these configurations of mouth - p,f,b,v,t,d,k,g,sh,a,e and so on - amount to nothing more than a few haphazard spits and splutters, random noises with no meaning, no ability to express, no power to explain. But run them through the cogs and wheels of the language machine, let it arrange them in some very special orders, and there is nothing that these meaningless streams of air cannot do: from sighing the interminable boredom of existence to unravelling the fundamental order of the universe.

D
The most extraordinary thing about language, however, is that one doesn't have to be a genius to set its wheels in motion. The language machine allows just about everybody - from pre-modern foragers in the subtropical savannah, to post-modern philosophers in the suburban sprawl - to tie these meaningless sounds together into an infinite variety of subtle senses, and all apparently without the slightest exertion. Yet it is precisely this deceptive ease which makes language a victim of its own success, since in everyday life its triumphs are usually taken for granted. The wheels of language run so smoothly that one rarely bothers to stop and think about all the resourcefulness and expertise that must have gone into making it tick. Language conceals art.

E
Often, it is only the estrangement of foreign tongues, with their many exotic and outlandish features, that brings home the wonder of languages design. One of the showiest stunts that some languages can pull off is an ability to build up words of breath-breaking length, and thus express in one word what English takes a whole sentence to say. The Turkish word çehirliliçtiremediklerimizdensiniz, to take one example, means nothing less than 'you are one of those whom we can't turn into a town-dweller'. (In case you were wondering, this monstrosity really is one word, not merely many different words squashed together - most of its components cannot even stand up on their own.)

F
And if that sounds like some one-off freak, then consider Sumerian, the language spoken on the banks of the Euphrates some 5,000 years ago by the people who invented writing and thus enabled the documentation of history. A Sumerian word like munintuma'a ('when he had made it suitable for her') might seem rather trim compared to the Turkish colossus above. What is so impressive about it, however, is not its lengthiness but rather the reverse - the thrifty compactness of its construction. The word is made up of different slots, each corresponding to a particular portion of meaning. This sleek design allows single sounds to convey useful information, and in fact even the absence of a sound has been enlisted to express something specific. If you were to ask which bit in the Sumerian word corresponds to the pronoun 'it' in the English translation 'when he had made it suitable for her', then the answer would have to be nothing. Mind you, a very particular kind of nothing: the nothing that stands in the empty slot in the middle. The technology is so fine-tuned then that even a non-sound, when carefully placed in a particular position, has been invested with a specific function. Who could possibly have come up with such a nifty contraption?

Questions 1-4

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
Choose TRUE, FALSE, or NOT GIVEN.

1. There may be genetic causes for the differences in how young the skin of identical twins looks.

Explanation: The text states that "Any differences between them - one twin having younger looking skin, for example - must be due to environmental factors such as less time spent in the sun." Therefore, it is environmental, not genetic.

2. Twins are at greater risk of developing certain illnesses than non-twins.

Explanation: The text compares identical twins with fraternal twins regarding illnesses, but does not compare twins' risks to non-twins.

3. Bouchard advertised in newspapers for twins who had been separated at birth.

Explanation: The text mentions that 137 sets of twins visited Bouchard's lab, but does not mention how they were recruited or if newspaper ads were used.

4. Epigenetic processes are different from both genetic and environmental processes.

Explanation: The passage explicitly states: "Epigenetic processes are chemical reactions tied to neither nature nor nurture but representing what researchers have called a 'third component'."

Questions 5-9

Look at the following statements and the list of researchers below. Match each statement with the correct researcher, A, B or C.

List of Researchers
A. Francis Galton
B. Thomas Bouchard
C. Danielle Reed

5. invented a term used to distinguish two factors affecting human characteristics

Explanation: Francis Galton "first suggested the approach (and coined the phrase 'nature and nurture')."

6. expressed the view that the study of epigenetics will increase our knowledge

Explanation: Danielle Reed adds, "the latest work in epigenetics promises to take our understanding even further."

7. developed a mathematical method of measuring genetic influences

Explanation: Galton is associated with developing concepts behind early genetics and measuring approaches in historical context according to the answer key structure provided.

8. pioneered research into genetics using twins

Explanation: Thomas Bouchard is referred to as "the trailblazer" by Danielle Reed regarding today's surge in twin studies.

9. carried out research into twins who had lived apart

Explanation: Thomas Bouchard's lab hosted 137 sets of twins in what became known as the "Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart."

Questions 10-13

Complete the summary using the list of words, A-F, below.

A. nurture
B. organs
C. code
D. chemicals
E. environment
F. behaviour/behavior

10. In epigenetic processes, influence the activity of our genes...

Explanation: The text says "Epigenetic processes are chemical reactions... [that] influence how our genetic code is expressed". Thus D (chemicals) is correct.

11. ...for example in creating our internal .

Explanation: The text mentions they "build our bones, brains and all the other parts of our bodies", making B (organs) the correct fit.

12. The study of epigenetic processes is uncovering a way in which our genes can be affected by our .

Explanation: "revealing a mechanism by which the environment directly impacts on genes." Matches E.

13. One example is that if a pregnant rat suffers stress, the new-born rat may later show problems in its .

Explanation: The text details how a rat experiencing stress during pregnancy can lead to "behavioral problems" as it grows up. F is correct.

Questions 14-18

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

14. In the first paragraph, the writer makes a point that




Explanation: The paragraph states, "we really cannot afford to underestimate the importance of film sound" meaning it would be wrong to overlook it.

15. One reason that the writer refers to Humphrey Bogart is to exemplify




Explanation: The writer notes that "Often with film characterization the audience perceives little or no difference between the character and the actor. Thus, for example, the actor Humphrey Bogart is the character Sam Spade; film personality and life personality seem to merge."

16. In the third paragraph, the writer suggests that




Explanation: Regarding 2001, "most of it was banal and of little intrinsic interest. In this way the film-maker was able to portray... the inadequacy of human responses...". It serves a specific purpose.

17. What does the writer suggest about Bringing Up Baby?




Explanation: "This use of dialogue underscores not only the dizzy quality of the character... but also the absurdity of the film itself and thus its humor."

18. The writer refers to the 'click' of a door to make the point that realistic sounds




Explanation: The text mentions the sound mixer may "call attention to the 'click' with an increase in volume; this helps to engage the audience in a moment of suspense." This shows modification to manipulate the response.

Questions 19-23

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?
Choose TRUE, FALSE, or NOT GIVEN.

19. Audiences are likely to be surprised if a film lacks background music.

Explanation: "We are probably all familiar with background music in films, which has become so ubiquitous as to be noticeable in its absence."

20. Background music may anticipate a development in a film.

Explanation: "In addition, background music often foreshadows a change in mood... to indicate an approaching menace or disaster."

21. Background music has more effect on some people than on others.

Explanation: The text does not discuss whether background music affects some people more than others.

22. Background music may help the audience to make certain connections within the film.

Explanation: "Background music may aid viewer understanding by linking scenes."

23. Audiences tend to be aware of how the background music is affecting them.

Explanation: The text states "The effects of sound are often largely subtle and often are noted by only our subconscious minds." This makes the statement FALSE.

Questions 24-26

Complete each sentence with the correct letter below, A-E.

A. when the audience listens to the dialogue.
B. if the film reflects the audience's own concerns.
C. if voice, sound and music are combined appropriately.
D. when the director is aware of how the audience will respond.
E. when the actor's appearance, voice and moves are consistent with each other.

24. The audience's response to different parts of a film can be controlled

Explanation: "These three tracks must be mixed and balanced so as to produce the necessary emphases which in turn create desired effects."

25. The feelings and motivations of characters become clear

Explanation: "dialogue serves to tell the story and expresses feelings and motivations of characters as well."

26. A character seems to be a real person rather than an actor

Explanation: "When voice textures fit the performer's physiognomy and gestures, a whole and very realistic persona emerges."

Questions 27-32

Choose the correct heading for paragraphs A-F from the list of headings below.

List of Headings
i. Differences between languages highlight their impressiveness
ii. The way in which a few sounds are organised to convey a huge range of meaning
iii. Why the sounds used in different languages are not identical
iv. Apparently incompatible characteristics of language
v. Even silence can be meaningful
vi. Why language is the most important invention of all
vii. The universal ability to use language

27. Paragraph A

Explanation: "Compared to language, all other inventions pale in significance...".

28. Paragraph B

Explanation: "Language is mankind's greatest invention - except, of course, that it was never invented. This apparent paradox is at the core..."

29. Paragraph C

Explanation: "barely three dozen measly morsels of sound... run them through the cogs and wheels... there is nothing that these meaningless streams of air cannot do".

30. Paragraph D

Explanation: "The language machine allows just about everybody... to tie these meaningless sounds together into an infinite variety of subtle senses".

31. Paragraph E

Explanation: "Often, it is only the estrangement of foreign tongues, with their many exotic and outlandish features, that brings home the wonder of languages design."

32. Paragraph F

Explanation: "even the absence of a sound has been enlisted to express something specific... the nothing that stands in the empty slot in the middle."

Questions 33-36

Complete the summary using the list of words, A-G, below.

A. difficult
B. complex
C. original
D. admired
E. material
F. easy
G. fundamental

33. The wheel is one invention that has had a major impact on aspects of life...

Explanation: "Other inventions - the wheel, agriculture, sliced bread - may have transformed our material existence..."

34. ...but no impact has been as as that of language.

Explanation: "Compared to language, all other inventions pale in significance... everything we have ever achieved depends on language and originates from it." (Fundamental)

35. Language is very yet composed of just a small number of sounds.

Explanation: "In its own right it is a tool of extraordinary sophistication..." (Complex)

36. Language appears to be to use. However, its sophistication is often overlooked.

Explanation: "all apparently without the slightest exertion. Yet it is precisely this deceptive ease which makes language a victim of its own success..."

Questions 37-40

Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading Passage 3?
Choose YES, NO, or NOT GIVEN.

37. Human beings might have achieved their present position without language.

Explanation: The text clearly states "Without language, we could never have embarked on our ascent to unparalleled power..."

38. The Port-Royal grammarians did justice to the nature of language.

Explanation: "This was how... grammarians of the Port-Royal abbey... distilled the essence of language, and no one since has celebrated more eloquently the magnitude of its achievement."

39. A complex idea can be explained more clearly in a sentence than in a single word.

Explanation: The text notes that some languages can express in one word what English takes a whole sentence to say, but does not compare the clarity between the two methods.

40. The Sumerians were responsible for starting the recording of events.

Explanation: "...consider Sumerian... the people who invented writing and thus enabled the documentation of history."

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