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English Senior High

やじるし部分のこたえを教えてほしいです

New Words ☐ canned [kænd] ☐ feed [fi:d] newsletter [n(jú:zlètǝr] specially [spéfǝli] emergency [imardzǝnsi] freshly [fréfli] ☐ originate [aridzanéit] baker [beikar ☐ victim [viktim] Odistribute [distribju:t] depressing [diprésiŋ] You are reading a newsletter article about canned bread. Canned Bread to Feed the rid Have you ever heard of canned bread? This specially pa bread is designed as emergency food. When you open the can tastes as delicious as freshly baked bread. The idea of canned bread originated in the Great Hans Awaji Earthquake of 1995. Immediately after the earthqua a baker named Akimoto Yoshihiko baked 2,000 rolls and s them to the victims. A few days later, he got bad news. Half the rolls went bad before they could be distributed to people need. Therefore, they were thrown away. Akimoto G1 disappointed to hear that. G1 G1 A little while later, one of the earthquake victims said to hi "It was so depressing to have only hard biscuits to eat. I'd like to create bread that keeps for a long time but stays saf G1 Akimoto decided to rise to the challenge. 72 1. What did Mr. Akimoto do immediately after the earthquake? 2. What happened to the rolls that Mr. Akimoto sent? 3. What did Mr. Akimoto decide to create? Opinion 1. Have you ever eaten canned bread? If you have, how did it taste? If you haven't, what do you think it tastes like? go bad ex. The milk will go bad if you don't put it in the fridge. rise to the challenge ex. Our team rose to the challenge and won the tournament.

Resolved Answers: 1
English Senior High

下線部Dと答え.ウはなぜ同じ用法なんでしょうか 教えてください🙏

closer to reality. Researchers have investigated the use of electricity to stimulate vision for nearly half a century. In the 1960's, a *physiologist implanted 80 electrodes on the surface of a blind person's *visual cortex, a region at the back of the brain. Wireless stimulation of the electrodes made the patient see spots of light known as *phosphenes. This is the first stop for visual signals coming from the eye. (D) By the 1980's, a crop of *ophthalmologists began considering a narrower and seemingly easier-to-solve problem: making *prostheses for the eye. They suggested that degrade *photoreceptor cells called *rods and cones, still leave large portions of the retina intact even after a patient has become totally blind. The way to stimulate the remaining functional cells was proved *feasible in the mid-1990's. A device consisting of a tiny video camera perched on the bridge of a pair of glasses, a belt-worn video processing unit, and an electronic box, was developed recently. The electronic box issues signals to an implant behind the patient's ear that has wires running to a grid of 16 electrodes affixed to the output layer of the retina. The video processor wirelessly transmits a simplified picture of what the camera images to the box, and then the retinal implant stimulates cells in a pattern roughly reflecting that information.

Resolved Answers: 1
TOEIC・English Undergraduate

下線部(1)の文構造が分かりません。特に2行目の文構造が分かりません。強調のdoであることは分かりますが、その後のthat以降が関係詞?かすらも分からないので、誰か教えて下さい!

次の英文は1991年に出版された本からのもので、 研究分野としての「人工知 能」 (Artificial Intelligence) について述べています。 下線部(1)~(3)を日本語に訳 しなさい。 What is Artificial Intelligence (AI)? Just about the only characterization of Al that would meet with universal acceptance is that it involves trying to make machines do tasks which are normally seen as requiring intelligence. There are countless refinements of this characterization: what sort of machines we want to consider; how we decide what tasks require intelligence and so on. One of the most important questions concerns the reasons why we want to make machines do such tasks. AI has always been split between people who want to make machines do tasks that require intelligence because they want more useful machines, and people who want to do it because they see it as a way of exploring how humans do such tasks. We will call the two approaches the engineering approach and the cognitive-science respectively. (2) (1) approach The techniques required for the two approaches are not always very different. For many of the tasks that engineering AI wants solutions to, the only systems we know about that can perform them are humans), so that, at least initially, the obvious way to design solutions is to try to mimic what we know about humans. For many of the tasks that cognitive-science Al wants solutions to, the evidence on how humans do them is too hard to interpret to enable us to construct computational models, so the only approach is to try to design solutions from scratch" and then see how well they fit what we know about humans. The main visible difference between the two approaches is in (3) their criteria for success; an engineer would be delighted to have create something that outperformed a person; a cognitive scientist would regard it as a failure. -1- M7 (492-61

Unresolved Answers: 1