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【单选题】

Until about 30 years ago, language researchers focused their studies on infants who had already begun to babble, according to Jusczyk, who has written a book on how children acquire language titled The Discovery of Spoken.Language.Babies start to vocalize at around four months of age, and to babble in strings of words at around six or seven months.
'Theories around at that time said that infants perceived speech sounds by producing them,' says Jusczyk.In other words, by listening to themselves babble, babies learned to tell one sound from another.Mom, Dad, or the babysitter would reinforce these sounds by repeating their utterances like, 'Baba! That's bottle.'
Researchers, however, had not developed methods of deciphering what went through a baby's mind before baby uttered his first 'Ma' or 'Papa'.So Jusczyk and other experimentalists devised techniques that allow them to study the pre-babbler.They have demonstrated that speech is the culmination of a tremendous amount of learning.Long before a baby utters his first 'baba', the researchers discovered, his mind is furiously sorting out the sounds and shapes of words and sentences.
Colleagues credit Jusczyk for being one of the key experimentalists to bridge the gap between the study of infant speech perception and language development.'Peter is the father of a lot of this work,' says Robin Cooper, an associate professor of psychology, who studies infant language acquisition.
In their decades-long search for the universal truths about language acquisition, Jusczyk and collaborators around the world have found that at every stage of development, babies know a lot more than they'd been given credit for.The very seeds of language learning, in fact, start to develop in the womb (子宫).
Researchers cannot easily investigate language perception in the womb, however.So they study newborn babies' reactions to sounds that mimic the muffled language that penetrates the womb.In this technique, newborn babies listen to filtered recordings of a woman (the baby's mother or another mother) speaking, while ing on a pacifier (婴儿用的橡皮) that is attached to a pressure transducer (传感器).Filtering erases the crisp edges of words, while leaving intact other features such as rhythm, melody, pitch, and intonation—similar to what a fetus (胎儿) hears in the womb.'It's kind of like listening to a stereo next door,' says William Fifer, an associate professor of developmental psychobiology at Columbia University.'You hear a lot of bass, but not the crisp, clear high frequencies.'
Using this technique, Fifer and his colleagues found that newborns harder on the pacifier when listening to filtered recordings of their own mother's voice in comparison to another mother's.The newborns thus recognize and prefer their own mother's voice, concludes Fifer.
In further studies, Jusczyk and postdoc Thierry Nazzi found that newborns prefer filtered recordings of their own native language over that of a foreign language.'Babies like what they know,' says Jusczyk.'Newborns,' he says, 'apparently learn the rhythm of their native language and of their mother's voice while in the womb.'
How do babies recognize different sounds?

A.
By listening to the sounds.
B.
By repeating the sounds.
C.
By listening to their own babbling.
D.
By uttering the sounds.
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【单选题】虫卵可从孕节子宫孔产出的绦虫是

A.
细粒棘球绦虫
B.
牛肉绦虫
C.
曼氏迭宫绦虫
D.
犬复孔绦虫

【单选题】重度胎盘早剥与先兆子宫破裂共有的临床特点是

A.
剧烈腹痛
B.
子宫呈板状硬
C.
合并妊娠高血压综合征
D.
出现病理缩复环

【单选题】以下不是传感器特点的是()。

A.
接触检测
B.
反应速度快
C.
安装灵活
D.
可以在水中使用

【单选题】子宫得以维持正常位置主要依靠

A.
四对韧带、盆底肌及筋膜的承托
B.
四对韧带对子宫的维持
C.
主要靠子宫阔韧带
D.
直肠和膀胱的支持

【单选题】维持子宫正常位置的是

A.
膀胱和直肠的支托作用
B.
腹腔压力作用
C.
子宫四对韧带的作用
D.
骨盆底肌肉及其上下筋膜支托作用
E.
子宫四对韧带及盆底肌肉筋膜的支托作用

【单选题】子宫的解剖下述哪项正确( )。

A.
位于骨盆中央,坐骨棘水平以下
B.
成年女性子宫长9~10cm
C.
容积约为10ml
D.
非孕期子宫峡部为1cm
E.
子宫底与子宫颈相接处为峡部

【多选题】按子宫破裂发生的部位分类为

A.
子宫颈破裂
B.
子宫峡破裂
C.
子宫下段破裂
D.
子宫体部破裂
E.
子宫底部破裂