Our new robot can help __________ the patient form. wheelchair to seat with relative ease. A、moveB、relocateC、shiftD、transfer
Our new robot can help __________ the patient form. wheelchair to seat with relative ease.
A、move
B、relocate
C、shift
D、transfer
相关考题:
A Narrative Nurses’ notes contain . () A. any change of the patient’s conditionB. a new problem of a patientC. a patient’s responds to a treatmentD. a patient’s responds to your teaching
According to the passage, both "popular" words and "learned" words ______.A. seem to be of no useB. can help people to get a better comprehension of the language.C. are easy to masterD. have gone beyond our mother's reach
For anyone who hates doing yard work, your new best friend may have arrived. A robot can autonomously shovel snow, collect leaves and cut grass.“We’re trying t o help people not spend time on yard work,”said Steven Waelbers, the designer of t he robot. “We want people to enjoy t heir free time with their family.”The electric robot can run by itself in right directions with the help of two beacons(信号塔) that must be placed in the yard. the robot includes a camera and ultrasound sensor (超声传感器) that Waelbers said would stop quickly when it finds pets and people.Owners of the robot will need t o regulate t he values stored in the robot. then it will confirm the task it’s going to take. Before the robot operate by itself, an owner must manually wheel it around the yard 一 taking it around any obstacles like trees, bushes or mailboxes. By doing this, the robot is taught how long and wide the lawn is, and won’t accidentally(不小心) destroy your rose hush or run to the neighborhood.Once this setup is complete, and the $3,999 robot has been trained on where to cut grass, rake leaves and shovel snow, it operates without any supervision.Waelbers has always loved to build robots and play with electronics. He started work on a high-tech company after his father asked him to make a robot that would shovel snow for him. Waelbers plans to start sales in early 2017.26. This article mainly talks about()A. a newly-designed robotB. The founder of a companyC. problems with a new product27. According to Steven Waelbers, the robot is designed to()A. encourage people to do exerciseB. help people keep healthy and fitC. make people enjoy family time28.the robot would stop in front of pets and people thanks to()A. the remote controllerB. the ultrasound sensorC. the big and square yard29. Which of the following steps should be done in the first place?()A. An owner must wheel the robot around the yard by himself.B. The robot learns and stores the length and width of the lawn.C. The robot operates the task it’s going to take without supervision.30. Which of the following about Waelbers is TRUE?()A. He didn’t love building robots when he was a young boy.B. His father asked him to make a robot that could play balls.C. He is starting to sell this snow-shoveling robot in early 2017.
Which cisco ios command can help to determine the timing of various debug events,relative to each other,when you are debugging a complicated router issue?() A. service timestamps debug datetime msecB. show clock detailC. clock calendar-validD. service timestamps log datetime msec
A wheelchair user may need help to enter .A.the HouseB.the gardenC.the Visitors’CentneD.the exhibition hall
B:根据对话内容填入适当的单词补全对话,使句义完整,符合逻辑,每空限填一个单词。A: 86 in the room?B: There are some kinds of robots made by the students in our school.A: Really? What are they 87 for?B: The one with blue eyes is a guide robot. She can show you around our school.A: 88 about the taller one?B: He is a cook robot. He can cook something nice for you.A: Oh, I think that’s a cleaning robot.B: Maybe you’re right. When he finds waste things, he’ll pick them up. He can 89 our environment clean.A: That’s wonderful! What good students! I’m proud of them.B: So 90 I.86.___________
Which of the following shows the proper rhythmical pattern of the sentence?A.′Come to ′see us at our ′new a′partment.B.′Come to ′see us at′our new ′apartment.C.′Come to ′see us ′at our ′new ′apartment.D.′Come to ′see us ′at our ′new a′partment.
When we grow older enough to earn a living,it does not surprise us to discover that success is measured in terms of the money we earn.We spend the whole of our lives keeping up with our neighbors,the Joneses.If we buy a new television set,Jones is( )to buy a bigger and better one.if we buy a new car,we can be sure that jones will go one better and get two new cars:one for his wife and one for himself.A.boundB.destinedC.doomed
We are glad to be doing business with you. Jennifer Owens will be your _______ contact for all incoming materials and orders. If you have a question about payment, contact Ms. Simpson in our accounting office. She will help you sort the matter out. Again, welcome aboard. If there is anything we can do to help facilitate this new relationship, please do not hesitate to ask. Sincerely,A.primacy B.primaries C.primary D.primarily
共用题干Motoring Technology1.2 million road deaths worldwide occur each year,plus a further 50 million injuries.To reduce car crash rate,much research now is focused on safety and new fuels-though some electric vehicle and biofuel research aims at going faster.Travelling at speed has always been dangerous.One advanced area of research in motoring safety is the use of digital in-car assistants.They can ensure you don't miss important road signs or fall asleep .Most crashes result from human and not mechanical faults.Some safety developments aim to improve your vision.Radar can spot obstacles in fog,while other technology"sees through"big vehicles blocking your view.And improvements to seat belts , pedal(脚踏)controls and tyres are making driving smoot- her and safer. The colour of a car has been found to be linked with safety,as have,less surpris- ingly,size and shape.But whatever is in the fuel tank,you don't want a thief in the driving seat and there have been many innovations(创新).Satellite tracking and remote communications can also come into play if you crash,automatically calling for help.Accidents cause many traffic jams,but there are more subtle interplays between vehicles that can cause jams even on a clear but busy road.Such jams can be analyzed using statistical tools.Robotic drivers could be programmed to make traffic flow smoothly and will perhaps one day be everyone's personal chauffeur(司机),but their latest efforts suggest that won't be soon. Which of the following safety developments is NOT mentioned in the passage?A: Windscreens that can help drivers to improve their vision.B: Radars that can help drivers to see obstacles in fog.C: Devices that can help drivers to see through big vehicles.D:Improvements in seat belts,pedal controls and tyres.
共用题干第三篇Controlling Robots with the MindBelle,our tiny monkey,was seated in her special chair inside a chamber at our Duke University lab. Her right hand grasped a joystick(操纵杆)as she watched a horizontal series of lights on a display panel.She knew that if a light suddenly shone and she moved the joystick left or right to correspond to its position,she would be sent a drop of fruit juice into her mouth.Belle wore a cap glued to her head.Under it were four plastic connectors,which fed arrays of microwires一each wire finer than the finest sewing thread一into different regions of Belle's motor cortex(脑皮层),the brain tissue that plans movements and sends instructions. Each of the 100 microwires lay beside a single motor neuron(神经元).When a neuron produced an electrical discharge,the adjacent microwire would capture the current and send it up through a small wiring bundle that ran from Belle's cap to a box of electronics on a table next to the booth.The box,in turn,was linked to two computers,one next door and the other half a country away.After months of hard work,we were about to test the idea that we could reliably translate the raw electrical activity in a living being's brain一Belle's mere thoughts一into signals that could direct the actions of a robot.We had assembled a multijointed robot arm in this room,away from Belle's view,which she would control for the first time.As soon as Belle's brain sensed a lit spot on the panel,electronics in the box running two real-time mathematical models would rapidly analyze the tiny action potentials produced by her brain cells.Our lab computer would convert the electrical patterns into instructions that would direct the robot arm.Six hundred miles north,in Cambridge,Mass,a different computer would produce the same actions in another robot arm built by Mandayam A. Srinivasan.Ifwe had done everything correctly,the two robot arms would behave as Belle's arm did,at exactly the same time.Finally the moment came.We randomly switched on lights in front of Belle,and she immediately moved her joystick back and forth to correspond to them.Our robot arm moved similarly to Belle's real arm.So did Srinivasan's.Belle and the robots moved in synchrony (同步),like dancers choreographed(设计舞蹈动作)by the electrical impulses sparking in Belle's mind.In the two years since that day,our labs and several others have advanced neuroscience,computer science and microelectronics to create ways for rats,monkeys and eventually humans to control mechanical and electronic machines purely by"thinking through,"or imagining,the motions.Our immediate goal is to help a person who has been unable to move by a neurological(神经的)disorder or spinal cord(脊髓)injury, but whose motor cortex is spared,to operate a wheelchair or a robotic limb.The short-term goal of the research is to help a personA:whose motor cortex is seriously damaged.B:who can operate a wheelchair but not a robotic limb.C:who has spinal cord injury but is able to move a wheelchair.D:who is unable to move but whose motor cortex is not damaged.
Our new house is very__________for me as I can get to the office in five minutes.A.adaptableB.comfortableC.convenientD.available
资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1) Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2) Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3) Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4) To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5) Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6) Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7) Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8) Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9) Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10) “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abouA.NeutralB.PositiveC.NegativeD.Critical
资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1) Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2) Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3) Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4) To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5) Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6) Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7) Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8) Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9) Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10) “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abouA.With the development of human robot interaction, robots ae now able to communicate with humans in an effective way.B.Scientists have many challenges in developing robots, such as how to modify their appearance and behavior.C.Human emotions enable robots to win the trust from human, especially the elderly and children.D.It is important to help people understand robots in order to develop robots to human needs.
翻译以下关于邮政储蓄填单业务有关对话。 ①Clerk: Please fill in this form. ②Customer: Sorry, I don’t know Chinese. Would you help me to complete the form? ③Clerk: I am afraid I cannot do it for you. This is our regulation. You can go to the information desk to ask the director on duty for help.
A user is experiencing headaches and motion sickness symptoms when using their new computermonitor. Which of the following can a technician adjust to help the user?()A、Privacy filterB、Refresh rateC、Use a digital signalD、Brightness
Which cisco ios command can help to determine the timing of various debug events,relative to each other, when you are debugging a complicated router issue?()A、service timestamps debug datetime msecB、show clock detailC、clock calendar-validD、service timestamps log datetime msec
外国乘客乘坐出租汽车时,驾驶员提醒乘客系好安全带,用英语表达应该是()。A、Where are you going?B、Can I help you?C、Please fasten your seat belt.
单选题How can we get _____ the new taxes and keep for some more money for our business?AoutBaroundConDaway
单选题—Can we please get a new air conditioner for our bedroom? — ______ —Can’t you see that it’s not working right?ADo you have to repair it?BIt is not very hot in this season.CI also think we should buy a new one.DWhat’s wrong with the one we have now?
填空题翻译以下关于邮政储蓄填单业务有关对话。 ①Clerk: Please fill in this form. ②Customer: Sorry, I don’t know Chinese. Would you help me to complete the form? ③Clerk: I am afraid I cannot do it for you. This is our regulation. You can go to the information desk to ask the director on duty for help.
单选题The author of this passage tries to __________.Apresent certain facts of how the development of a person’s attitude can be influencedBshow that our society is not doing enough to help children shape their attitudesCpoint out that teachers are the only people who can influence the children’s attitudesDprove that speeches and books are the only factors to indoctrinate children
问答题There are robots all along, making our lives easier. Some of them, like the (1) _______pocket calculator, can work much more quickly as human beings can. And they (2) _______rarely make mistakes. In some ways robots are better than people.. They work quickly, but not tomake mistakes. They do not get boring doing the same job over and over (3) _______again. And they never get tired. So are robots very useful in factories. They can be taught to do many (4) _______different jobs. First their electronic brains must show how the job is done. A (5) _______person moves the robot’s “arms” and “hand” through each part of the job. Therobot’s brain remembers each move. When the robot is put to work on its itself, (6) _______its brain controls the rods, wheels and motors which move its arm. When the robot needed for a new job, its electronic memory is “wiped (7) _______clean”. Then it is taught how to do its new task. If the robot’s hand stops to work, or if something gets in the way, it (8) _______cannot do the next part of the job. So it starts and signals for help. Then a (9) _______human engineer attends to the fault. Robots are also used for doing jobs which are dangerous. They canmove objects which are too hot or too heavy to people to handle. They can (10) _______work in places which are too hot or too cold.
单选题Seat belts can make us safer because _____.Awe are interested in themBthey can stop us from hitting other carsCthey can help us stay safely on the seatsDthey are made of strong materials