신기출 3월 - SWT (29/3 업데잇)

신기출 3월 - SWT (29/3 업데잇)

22 charminganna 30 14,938 2018.03.21 13:18
(원문)이라고 표기해 놓은 문제들은 시험문제와 똑같다고 반영한 후기들이 세개이상 초과한 기출문제 입니다.
1. Indonesian Volcano (원문)
In 1815 on the island of Sumbawa in Indonesia, a handsome and long-quiescent mountain named Tambora exploded spectacularly, killing a hundred thousand people with its blast and associated tsunamis. It was the biggest volcanic explosion in ten thousand years—150 times the size of Mount St. Helens, equivalent to sixty thousand Hiroshima-sized atom bombs.
News didn’t travel terribly fast in those days. In London, The Times ran a small story— actually a letter from a merchant—seven months after the event. But by this time Tambora’s effects were already being felt. Thirty-six cubic miles of smoky ash, dust, and grit had diffused through the atmosphere, obscuring the Sun’s rays and causing the Earth to cool. Sunsets were unusually but blearily colourful, an effect memorably captured by the artist.J. M. W. Turner, who could not have been happier, but mostly the world existed under an oppressive, dusky pall. It was this deathly dimness that inspired the Byron lines above.
Spring never came and summer never warmed: 1816 became known as the year without summer. Crops everywhere failed to grow. In Ireland a famine and associated typhoid epidemic killed sixty-five thousand people. In New England, the year became popularly known as Eighteen Hundred and Froze to Death. Morning frosts continued until June and almost no planted seed would grow. Short of fodder, livestock died or had to be prematurely slaughtered. In every way it was a dreadful year—almost certainly the worst for farmers in modern times. Yet globally the temperature fell by only about 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit. Earth’s natural thermostat, as scientists would learn, is an exceedingly delicate instrument.

2. American English (원문)
American English is, without doubt, the most influential and powerful variety of English in the world today. There are many reasons for this. First, the United States is, at present, the most powerful nation on earth and such power always brings with it influence. Indeed, the distinction between a dialect and a language has frequently been made by reference to power. As has been said, a language is a dialect with an army. Second, America's political influence is extended through American popular culture, in particular through the international reach of American films (movies, of course) and music. As Kahane has pointed out, The internationally dominant position of a culture results in a forceful expansion of its language.... the expansion of language contributes... to the prestige of the culture behind it. Third, the international prominence of American English is closely associated with the extraordinarily quick development of communications technology. Microsoft is owned by an American, Bill Gates. This means a computer s default setting for language is American English, although of course this can be changed to suit one's own circumstances. In short, the increased influence of American English is caused by political power and the resultant diffusion of American culture and media, technological advance and the rapid development of communications technology.

3. Research on Birds- Climate Change (원문)
As warmer winter temperatures become more common, one way for some animals to adjust is to shift their ranges northward. But a new study of 59 North American bird species indicates that doing so is not easy or quick -- it took about 35 years for many birds to move far enough north for winter temperatures to match where they historically lived.
For example, black vultures have spread northward in the last 35 years and now winter as far north as Massachusetts, where the minimum winter temperature is similar to what it was in Maryland in 1975. On the other hand, the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker did not alter its range at all despite the warming trend, possibly because its very specific habitat requirements precluded a range shift.
Both of these scenarios could represent problems for birds, La Sorte said. Species that do not track changes in climate may wind up at the limits of their physiological tolerance, or they may lose important habitat qualities, such as favored food types, as those species pass them by. But they also can't move their ranges too fast if the habitat conditions they depend on also tend to lag behind climate.


4. Books and Television (원문)
To understand the final reason why the news marketplace of ideas dominated by television is so different form the one that emerged in the world dominated by the printing press, it is important to distinguish the quality of vividness experienced by television viewers from the “vividness” experienced by readers. I believe that the vividness experienced in the reading of words is automatically modulated by the constant activation of the reasoning centres of the brain that are used in the process of cocreating the representation of reality the author has intended. By contrast, the visceral vividness portrayed on television has the capacity to trigger instinctual responses similar to those triggered by reality itself – and without being modulated by logic, reason, and reflective thought.
The simulation of reality accomplished in the television medium is so astonishingly vivid and compelling compared with the representations of reality conveyed by printed words that it signifies much more than an incremental change in the way people consume information. Books also convey compelling and vivid representation of reality, of course. But the reader actively participates in the conjuring of the reality the book’s author is attempting to depict. Moreover, the parts of the human brain that are central to the reasoning process are continually activated by the very act of reading printed words: Words are composed of abstract symbols – letters – that have no intrinsic meaning themselves until they are strung together into recognisable sequences.
Television, by contrast, present to its viewers a much more fully formed representation of reality – without requiring the creative collaboration that words have always demanded.

5.  Rosetta Stone (원문)
When the Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799, the carved characters that covered its surface were quickly copied. Printer's ink was applied to the Stone and white paper laid over it. When the paper was removed, it revealed an exact copy of the text—but in reverse. Since then, many copies or "facsimiles" have been made using a variety of materials. Inevitably, the surface of the Stone accumulated many layers of material left over from these activities, despite attempts to remove any residue. Once on display, the grease from many thousands of human hands eager to touch the Stone added to the problem. 

An opportunity for investigation and cleaning the Rosetta Stone arose when this famous object was made the centerpiece of the Cracking Codes exhibition at The British Museum in 1999. When work commenced to remove all but the original, ancient material the stone was black with white lettering. As treatment progressed, the different substances uncovered were analyzed. Grease from human handling, a coating of carnauba wax from the early 1800s and printer's ink from 1799 were cleaned away using cotton wool swabs and liniment of soap, white spirit, acetone and purified water. Finally, white paint in the text, applied in 1981, which had been left in place until now as a protective coating, was removed with cotton swabs and purified water. A small square at the bottom left corner of the face of the Stone was left untouched to show the darkened wax and the white infill. 

6. The importance of Water (원문)
Water is at the core of sustainable development. Water resources, and the range of services they provide, underpin poverty reduction, economic growth and environmental sustainability. From food and energy security to human and environmental health, water contributes to improvements in social well-being and inclusive growth, affecting the livelihoods of billions.
In a sustainable world that is achievable in the near future, water and related resources are managed in support of human well-being and ecosystem integrity in a robust economy. Sufficient and safe water is made available to meet every person’s basic needs, with healthy lifestyles and behaviours easily upheld through reliable and affordable water supply and sanitation services, in turn supported by equitably extended and efficiently managed infrastructure. Water resources management, infrastructure and service delivery are sustainably financed. Water is duly valued in all its forms, with wastewater treated as a resource that avails energy, nutrients and freshwater for reuse. Human settlements develop in harmony with the natural water cycle and the ecosystems that support it, with measures in place that reduce vulnerability and improve resilience to water-related disasters. Integrated approaches to water resources development, management and use − and to human rights − are the norm. Water is governed in a participatory way that draws on the full potential of women and men as professionals and citizens, guided by a number of able and knowledgeable organizations, within a just and transparent institutional framework.

7. Eye surgery - Blindness (원문)
Scientists believe they may have found a way to prevent complications that can arise following cataract surgery, the world’s leading cause of blindness.
Detailing why complications can occur after surgery, researchers from the University of East Anglia (UEA) explained that while cataract surgery works well to restore vision, a few natural lens cells always remain after the procedure. Over time, the eye’s wound-healing response leads these cells to spread across the underside of the artificial lens, which interferes with vision, causing what’s known as ‘posterior capsule opacification’ or secondary cataract.
UEA’s School of Biological Sciences academic, Dr Michael Wormstone, who led the study, said: “Secondary visual loss responds well to treatment with laser surgery. But as life expectancy increases, the problems of cataract and posterior capsule opacification will become even greater in terms of both patient well being and economic burden. It’s essential that we find better ways to manage the condition in future.”
As a result, researchers are designing new artificial lenses that can be placed into a capsular bag that stays open, instead of shrink-wrapping closed, which currently occurs. It is believed that, through the new approach, fluid in the eye can flow around the artificial lens, therefore diluting and washing away the cell-signalling molecules that encourage cell re-growth.

8. Autism (원문)
Autism is a disorder characterized by impairments in communication, social interaction, and repetitive behaviors. Over the past 40 years, the measured prevalence of autism has multiplied roughly 10-fold. While progress has been made in understanding some of the factors associated with increased risk and rising prevalence, no one knows with certainty what causes autism or what caused autism prevalence to rise so precipitously. There is, however, a growing awareness among scholars that focusing solely on individual risk factors such as exposure toxicants, prenatal complications, or parental education is insufficient to explain why autism prevalence rates have increased so stunningly. Social and institutional processes likely play an important role. For example, changes in diagnostic criteria and an influx of resources dedicated to autism diagnosis may be critical to understanding why prevalence rates have risen. Increased awareness and social influence have been implicated in the rise of autism and a variety of comparable disorders, where social processes mimic the effects of contagion. Studies have examined the contribution of changes in diagnostic criteria and diagnostic substitution to rising autism prevalence rates, but the importance of institutional factors, resources for diagnosis, and greater awareness have not been systematically assessed. The sociological literature on health and inequality, however, provides substantial motivation for exploring how individual- and community-level effects operate to shape the likelihood of an autism diagnosis.

9. Frog in Amber (원문)
A tiny tree frog preserved in amber is believed to have lived about 25 million years ago, a Mexican researcher says. The chunk of amber containing the centimetre-long frog was uncovered by a miner in southern Chiapas state in 2005 and bought by a private collector, who lent it to scientists for study.
Only a few preserved frogs have been found in chunks of amber — a stone formed by ancient tree sap — mostly in the Dominican Republic. Like those, the frog found in Chiapas was of the genus Craugastor, whose relatives still inhabit the region. Gerardo Carbot, the biologist with the Chiapas Natural History and Ecology Institute who announced the discovery on Wednesday, said it was the first such frog found in amber in Mexico.
Carbot said he would like to extract a sample from the frog's remains to see whether they contain well-preserved DNA, in order to identify the frog's species. However, he expressed doubt that the stone's owner would allow researchers to drill a small hole into the chunk of amber. 

10. Twins (원문)
UCLA neurology professor Paul Thompson and his colleagues scanned the brains of 23 sets of identical twins and 23 sets of fraternal twins. Since identical twins share the same genes while fraternal twins share about half their genes, the researchers were able to compare each group to show that myelin integrity was determined genetically in many parts of the brain that are key for intelligence. These include the parietal lobes, which are responsible for spatial reasoning, visual processing and logic, and the corpus callosum, which pulls together information from both sides of the body.
The researchers used a faster version of a type of scanner called a HARDI (high-angular resolution diffusion imaging) — think of an MRI machine on steroids — that takes scans of the brain at a much higher resolution than a standard MRI. While an MRI scan shows the volume of different tissues in the brain by measuring the amount of water present, HARDI tracks how water diffuses through the brain's white matter — a way to measure the quality of its myelin.
"HARDI measures water diffusion," said Thompson, who is also a member of the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro-Imaging. "If the water diffuses rapidly in a specific direction, it tells us that the brain has very fast connections. If it diffuses more broadly, that's an indication of slower signaling, and lower intelligence."

11. The Story of Columbus (원문)
 When Christopher Columbus arrived at Hispaniola during his first transatlantic voyage in the year A.D. 1492, the island had already been settled by Native Americans for about 5,000 years. The occupants in Columbus’s time were a group of Arawak Indians called Tainos who lived by farming, were organized into five chiefdoms, and numbered around half a million (the estimates range from 100,000 to 2,000,000). Columbus initially found them peaceful and friendly, until he and his Spaniards began mistreating them.
Unfortunately for the Tainos, they had gold, which the Spanish coveted but didn’t want to go to the work of mining themselves. Hence the conquerors divided up the island and its Indian population among individual Spaniards, who put the Indians to work as virtual slaves, accidentally infected them with Eurasian diseases, and murdered them. By the year 1519, 27 years after Columbus’s arrival, that original population of half a million had been reduced to about 11,000, most of whom died that year of smallpox to bring the population down to 3,000.


_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
***아래 문제들은 키워드로 유사 문장들을 찾은것이고 원문판정을 기다리고 있는 문제이기도 합니다.

** Electric Vehicle - PEV (시험에서도 이 문장 전체가 나오나요? 내용이 엄청 많네요..ㅜㅜ)
Here's a term you're going to hear much more often: plug-in vehicle, and the acronym PEV. It's what you and many other people will drive to work in, ten years and more from now. At that time, before you drive off in the morning you will first unplug your car - your plug-in vehicle. Its big on board batteries will have been fully charged overnight, with enough power for you to drive 50-100 kilometres through city traffic.
When you arrive at work you'll plug in your car once again, this time into a socket that allows power to flow form your car's batteries to the electricity grid. One of the things you did when you bought your car was to sign a contract with your favourite electricity supplier, allowing them to draw a limited amount of power from your car's batteries should they need to, perhaps because of a blackout, or very high wholesale spot power prices. The price you get for the power the distributor buys form your car would not only be most attractive to you, it would be a good deal for them too, their alternative being very expensive power form peaking stations. If, driving home or for some other reason your batteries looked like running flat, a relatively small, but quiet and efficient engine running on petrol, diesel or compressed natural gas, even biofuel, would automatically cut in, driving a generator that supplied the batteries so you could complete your journey.
Concerns over 'peak oil', increasing greenhouse gas emissions, and the likelihood that by the middle of this century there could be five times as many motor vehicles registered world-wide as there are now, mean that the world's almost total dependence on petroleum-based fuels for transport is, in every sense of the word, unsustainable.

** Malaysia
Malaysia is one of the most pleasant, hassle-free countries to visit in Southeast Asia. Aside from its gleaming 21st century glass towers, it boasts some of the most superb beaches, mountains and national parks in the region.
Malaysia is also launching its biggest-ever tourism campaign in effort to lure 20 million visitors here this year. More than 16 million tourists visited in 2005, the last year for which complete statistics were available. While the majority of them were from Asia, mostly neighboring Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Brunei, China, Japan and India, a growing number of Western travelers are also making their way to this Southeast Asian tropical paradise. Of the 885,000 travelers from the West, 240,000 were from the United Kingdom, 265,000 from Australia and 150,000 from the U.S.
Any tourist itinerary would have to begin in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, where you will find the Petronas Twin Towers, which once comprised the world's tallest buildings and now hold the title of second-tallest. Both the 88-story towers soar 1,480 feet high and are connected by a sky-bridge on the 41st floor.
Also worth visiting is the Central Market, a pre-war building that was the main wet market for the city, and has now been transformed into an arts and cultural center.
The limestone temple Batu Caves, located 9 miles north of the city, have a 328-foot-high ceiling and feature ornate Hindu shrines, including a 141-foot-tall gold-painted statue of a Hindu deity. To reach the caves, visitors have to climb a steep flight of 272 steps.
In Sabah state on Borneo island -- not to be confused with Indonesia's Borneo -- you'll find the small mushroom-shaped Sipadan island, off the coast of Sabah, rated as one of the top five diving sites in the world. Sipadan is the only oceanic island in Malaysia, rising from a 2,300-foot abyss in the Celebes Sea.
You can also climb Mount Kinabalu, the tallest peak in Southeast Asia, visit the Sepilok Orang Utan Sanctuary, go white-water rafting and catch a glimpse of the bizarre Proboscis monkey, a primate found only in Borneo with a huge pendulous nose, a characteristic pot belly and strange honking sounds.
While you're in Malaysia, consider a trip to Malacca. In its heyday, this southern state was a powerful Malay sultanate and a booming trading port in the region. Facing the Straits of Malacca, this historical state is now a place of intriguing Chinese streets, antique shops, old temples and reminders of European colonial powers.
Another interesting destination is Penang, known as the "Pearl of the Orient." This island off the northwest coast of Malaysia boasts of a rich Chinese cultural heritage, good food and beautiful beaches.

** Multi-life
Life expectancies have been rising by up to three months a year since 1840, and there is no sign of that flattening. Gratton and Scott draw on a 2009 study to show that if the trend continues, more than half the babies born in wealthier countries since 2000 may reach their 100th birthdays.
With a few simple, devastating strokes, Gratton and Scott show that under the current system it is almost certain you won’t be able to save enough to fund several decades of decent retirement. For example, if your life expectancy is 100, you want a pension that is 50 per cent of your final salary, and you save 10 per cent of your earnings each year, they calculate that you won’t be able to retire till your 80s. People with 100-year life expectancies must recognise they are in for the long haul, and make an early start arranging their lives accordingly.
But how to go about this? Gratton and Scott advance the idea of a multistage life, with repeated changes of direction and attention. Material and intangible assets will need upkeep, renewal or replacement. Skills will need updating, augmenting or discarding, as will networks of friends and acquaintances. Earning will be interspersed with learning or self-reflection. As the authors warn, recreation will have to become “re-creation”.

**  Cities
How can we design great cities from scratch if we cannot agree on what makes them great? None of the cities where people most want to live — such as London, New York, Paris and Hong Kong — comes near to being at the top of surveys asking which are best to live in.
The top three in the most recent Economist Intelligence Unit’s liveability ranking, for example, were Melbourne, Vancouver and Vienna. They are all perfectly pleasant, but great? The first question to tackle is the difference between liveability and greatness. Perhaps we cannot aspire to make a great city, but if we attempt to make a liveable one, can it in time become great?
There are some fundamental elements that you need. The first is public space. Whether it is Vienna’s Ringstrasse and Prater park, or the beaches of Melbourne and Vancouver, these are places that allow the city to pause and the citizens to mingle and to breathe, regardless of class or wealth. Good cities also seem to be close to nature, and all three have easy access to varied, wonderful landscapes and topographies.
A second crucial factor, says Ricky Burdett, a professor of urban studies at the London School of Economics, is a good transport system. “Affordable public transport is the one thing which cuts across all successful cities,” he says.

** Great Managers
What do great managers actually do?
In my research, beginning with a survey of 80,000 managers conducted by the Gallup Organization and continuing during the past two years with in-depth studies of a few top performers, I’ve found that while there are as many styles of management as there are managers, there is one quality that sets truly great managers apart from the rest: They discover what is unique about each person and then capitalize on it. Average managers play checkers, while great managers play chess. The difference? In checkers, all the pieces are uniform and move in the same way; they are interchangeable. You need to plan and coordinate their movements, certainly, but they all move at the same pace, on parallel paths. In chess, each type of piece moves in a different way, and you can’t play if you don’t know how each piece moves. More important, you won’t win if you don’t think carefully about how you move the pieces. Great managers know and value the unique abilities and even the eccentricities of their employees, and they learn how best to integrate them into a coordinated plan of attack.
This is the exact opposite of what great leaders do. Great leaders discover what is universal and capitalize on it. Their job is to rally people toward a better future. Leaders can succeed in this only when they can cut through differences of race, sex, age, nationality, and personality and, using stories and celebrating heroes, tap into those very few needs we all share. The job of a manager, meanwhile, is to turn one person’s particular talent into performance. Managers will succeed only when they can identify and deploy the differences among people, challenging each employee to excel in his or her own way. This doesn’t mean a leader can’t be a manager or vice versa. But to excel at one or both, you must be aware of the very different skills each role requires.

** Benefits of Honey (달발님 감사합니다)
If you've been buying sports gels to keep you going during your workout, you might want to try honey instead. According to findings presented today at the annual Experimental Biology conference, honey delivers a significant performance boost to athletes during strenuous exercise.
"Numerous studies have singled out carbohydrates as a critical nutrient in endurance exercise," says principal investigator Richard Kreider of the University of Memphis Exercise and Sport Nutrition Laboratory. "Most of the studies to date have shown supplementation with glucose to provide the extra staying power. We were pleased to find that honey, a 'cocktail' of various natural sugars, performed just as well."
The team let nine competitive male cyclists cycle for 64 kilometers each week for three weeks, feeding them honey, dextrose gel or a flavored, calorie-free placebo. Participants received 15 grams of that supplement along with 250 millilitres of water before they raced and then every 16 kilometres while cycling. Both the honey and the dextrose gel led to better times and more cycling power among the athletes, as compared with the placebois effects. While the dextrose gel slightly outperformed honey, the difference was negligible, leading the researchers to conclude that honey can be a natural and effective carbohydrate source for endurance athletes.

A research focused on diet of athletes,... found that honey has benefit of reducing xx rate and ...
Honey is good at xx
Honey can be absorbed with protein powder... and that...

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
***아래 문제들은 키워드만 존재하는 기출문제들입니다.

** Syllabus of Courses
Courses require specific syllabus to develop exact technology
Student can learn it from their experience and xx
But teachers are unable to develop ...
So the solution is xx project that using clouds system to ...

** The World Wide Web
The world wide web invented by ... . It changes the way people shop and listen to music. It also changed economic political and terrorism because it makes people have the same opportunities to assess information.

** New Symbolic Architecture
The school has a characteristic of buildings, fully functional,
evolution and future education ...

** International Trade
Multinational companies and international trade contribute many GDP to their economy,
America is one of the biggest beneficial country

** Online Learning
The benefit of online learning is ...
However, it still requires guidance and adviser.

** Library
A report ... the researchers think library requires to change ... services, database..
도서관이 어떻게 바뀌면 researcher한테 더 유용하게 사용되는지에 대한 내용.
+수정: Libraries should be improved to be better used by researchers, and actions should be taken to start these improvements.

** Free Labour System
Mentioned about Lincoln,, the view of free labour system ...

** Paying for Child
Whether pay for child..
But let them know about allowance , personal finance, bank... service.. etc.

** Nutrition Science
This is newly-born science which was started 200years ago,... the scientists..

** US Election
nominated in their political parties
media, candidate survey etc.

** Demand for Energy
Fossil energy... increased... by population...
and examples.

Author

Lv.22 22 charminganna  실버
4,330 (41.9%)

Anna Yoon

Comments

14 flyingJ 2018.03.21 13:35
어제 셤보고 왔는데, 기출문제 다시 정리해야 할거 같아요. Swt, rs, wfd, ra, asq, rl, sst 모두 새로운 문제들이 나왔어요.
22 charminganna 2018.03.21 13:45
RS, ASQ, RA, RL은 워낙 기출에서 잘 안나오니까 별로 신경 안쓰고 있었는데 나머지 파트는 특히 WFD... 은 기출문제가 있어야 할것 같아요... 지금 보니까 문제가 70% 전부 바뀐 추세인것 같습니다. 좋은소식은 오늘부터 반복되는 문제가 나오고 있다네요. 지금 에세이 파트 정리하고 있습니다. 곧 업데잇 예정입니다 ㅋㅋ 근데 저 위에서 한문제라도 나온거 있나요?
14 flyingJ 2018.03.21 16:09
로제타 스톤 하나 있네요!
22 charminganna 2018.03.21 16:21
오... 다행이네요. 더이상 나오지 말았으면 좋겠어요 ... 아까 보니까 또 세문제 추가 됏더라구요.. 내일쯤 수정해서 추가된걸 다시 올려야 겠어요.
7 hayy 2018.03.21 15:08
애나님.. 진심 감사드려요. 이렇게 아낌없이 늘 공유해주시는게 쉽지 않은 일인데.. 정말 감사합니다~~ !!
20 Jaylee 2018.03.21 16:01
감사합니다. 지금 까지 외웠던게 수포로 돌아가네요.ㅠ
22 charminganna 2018.03.21 16:21
아직도 원래기출도 함께 나온다네요. 운좋으면 시험에 나올수 있어요!
10 Noham 2018.03.21 17:20
Sst는 계속 그대로인건가용?
22 charminganna 2018.03.21 17:27
새기출 올렸습니다. 무려 20개나 되더군요...
10 Happy한girl 2018.03.21 17:36
어제 swt 에서 planning을 학생들에게 가르쳐야 하는 이유들에 관한문제 들도 나왔어요
22 charminganna 2018.03.21 17:41
혹시 arrange personal finance, allowance ...어떻게 투자하고 ...이런 내용이였나요?
10 Happy한girl 2018.03.21 17:48
아니요 planning을 가르치면 아이들이 어려운 상황에 닥쳤을때 문제를 다른 방향으로 바꿀수 있다 그리고 장덤 몇개가 더 있었구요 어떤 사람들은 오히려 스트레스를 주게 되니깐 안가르쳤으면 좋겠지만 그래도 장점이 더 많다 였던거 같은데 제가 실력이 높질 않아서 ㅠㅠ기억이 잘 안나요
22 charminganna 2018.03.21 17:56
답변 감사합니다.진짜 새로운 문제네요. 아직 이문제는 신기출에도 없는것 같습니다. 제가 기억했다가 보이면 업데잇 할께요.
6 Kingy 2018.03.23 02:15
Hi Anna I found this quiet matching with 18. Twins The research on twins ... the DNA ... HARDI scanner , MRI resolution. Will you please confirm: http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/more-proof-that-intelligence-is-85134
22 charminganna 2018.03.23 10:33
Thank Kingy!! That's really similar.. I will update it shortly. If it's not the exactly same one as exam, it's still good enough to practice!! thanks again for sharing.
1 nsuvagiy 2018.07.24 00:45
Twins are a valuable resource for the study of complex traits. The twin method is substantially based on the comparison between correlations and concordance in monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins and allows several applications in biomedical and molecular genetic research. It allows either the qualitative and quantitative evaluation of the influences that genetic and environmental factors exert on phenotypes or the estimation of trait variability. Moreover, classical genetic linkage analysis is more powerful if performed in DZ twins. However, the twin method has some pitfalls, such as the necessity that collected samples be representative of both twin and general population. For this reason, over the last few years, a number of Countries have established population-based twin registers, which guarantee the maximum level of representation and, consequently, are of extreme value for epidemiological studies


how about his paragraph ??
6 Kingy 2018.03.23 11:37
I want to help this community as much as I can because I have gained much from the members of this invaluable community and it is time to repay. Thanks Anna for helping us. I have found similar to 7. Research on Birds- Climate Change. Could you please verify this as well. I think it covers almost all keywords provided by you.

The early warning signs of climate change can be seen in shifts in timing of important seasonal events for birds, such as egg laying and migration. These shifts have been documented in North America, Australia and Europe. Somebirds in Europe have even stopped migrating altogether with climate warming (Lehikoinen et al., 2004).

These timing shifts are a threat when they force birds’ life cycles out of synchrony with plants and insects upon which they depend. In Europe,some populations of pied flycatchers, which are long-distance migratorybirds, have suffered a 90 per cent decline in numbers over the past two decades, an effect strongly linked to their failure to keep pace with climate change. With their insect prey number speaking earlier due to warming, but the migration timing unchanged, they no longer arrive at their breeding grounds in time to match peak food supply with peak nestling demands (Both et al., 2006).Thus climatically-forced shifts can harm birds’ reproductive success and survival, and could even contribute to the collapse of breeding populations over the (long term) (Sanz et al., 2003).The mismatch puts serious additional pressure on long-distance migrant birds, which are vulnerable to the summed climatic risk for each habitat used along their migration path (Huntley et al.,2006). Of 119 long-distance migrants studied in Europe, 54 per cent have already shown a sustained, often severe, decline from 1970 to 2000, with climate change implicated as a major contributing factor (Sanderson et al., 2006)
22 charminganna 2018.03.23 11:46
great job kingy!! To find out similar contents to practice is priority at this stage. This one will works perfectly.
15 ichitaka 2018.03.21 21:44
주옥같은 자료 항상 감사드립니다.
19 오비완 2018.03.27 12:45
3월 20일 무교동에서 9번 Television vs printed press 나왔었습니다. 보니까 기억나네요.
22 charminganna 2018.03.27 12:54
저문제 혹시 기억나시면 원문 맞는지 알수 있을까요? 보니까 5개가 넘는 후기에서 찾은 문장이 똑같다고 반영해서 일단 원문으로 표기했어요.
19 오비완 2018.03.27 13:08
네 99% 원문 맞습니다. 도입부가 To understand the "final" reason 은 아니었던 것 같은데, 문맥에는 지장이 없습니다.
22 charminganna 2018.03.27 13:19
답변 감사합니다 :)
19 오비완 2018.03.27 14:23
18번은 제가 본 자료에 의하면 제일 앞에 "UCLA neurology professor Paul " 만 붙이면 원문인 걸로 보입니다.
22 charminganna 2018.03.27 15:05
그렇군요. 요즘 SWT만 연습하고 있어요...ㅜㅜ 진짜 난의도가 높아진것 같아요... 다른친구가 Indonesian volcano 원문도 보내주겟다고 하네요. 이제 받으면 18번 문제랑 함께 업데이트 해야 겠어요. 감사합니다:)
5 워너비 2018.03.28 13:40
오늘 시험 쳤는데, 인도네시안 볼케이노 나왔어요!
하나는 송 버드 나머지 하나는 기억이 안나네요ㅎ
15 달발 2018.03.29 16:40
드뎌 찾았어요 원문이 맞는지 확인 필요합니다.
Benefits of Honey
If you've been buying sports gels to keep you going during your workout, you might want to try honey instead. According to findings presented today at the annual Experimental Biology conference, honey delivers a significant performance boost to athletes during strenuous exercise.
"Numerous studies have singled out carbohydrates as a critical nutrient in endurance exercise," says principal investigator Richard Kreider of the University of Memphis Exercise and Sport Nutrition Laboratory. "Most of the studies to date have shown supplementation with glucose to provide the extra staying power. We were pleased to find that honey, a 'cocktail' of various natural sugars, performed just as well."
The team let nine competitive male cyclists cycle for 64 kilometers each week for three weeks, feeding them honey, dextrose gel or a flavored, calorie-free placebo. Participants received 15 grams of that supplement along with 250 millilitres of water before they raced and then every 16 kilometres while cycling. Both the honey and the dextrose gel led to better times and more cycling power among the athletes, as compared with the placebois effects. While the dextrose gel slightly outperformed honey, the difference was negligible, leading the researchers to conclude that honey can be a natural and effective carbohydrate source for endurance athletes.
22 charminganna 2018.03.29 17:01
감사합니다. sports gel은 나온거 확실합니다. 아...제가 분명 시험에서 만낫는데 이젠 기억이 가물가물하네요 ㅜㅜ 일단 유사문제에 업데잇 하겠습니다. 다른분들 판정 기다려 보죠. 다시한번 감사드립니다.
1 sekhar 2018.04.02 19:36
i got below SWT on 19th march :

http://www.achievegroup.com.au/news/donec-venenatis-placerat-ligula
4 ELENA 2018.04.13 18:01
안녕하세요 SWT는 이거 토대로 직접 요약해서 연습하면되는건가요??
근데 SWT도 템플릿이 있나요?? 아니면 스스로 기출보고 공부 다 하면 되는건가용???