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TOEIC・英語 大学生・専門学校生・社会人

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15 語数: 398 語 出題校 法政大 5 We are already aware that our every move online is tracked and analyzed. But you 2-53 couldn't have known how much Facebook can learn about you from the smallest of social interactions - a 'like'*. (1) Researchers from the University of Cambridge designed (2) a simple machine-learning 2-54 system to predict Facebook users' personal information based solely on which pages they had liked. E "We were completely surprised by the accuracy of the predictions," says Michael 2-55 Kosinski, lead researcher of the project. Kosinski and colleagues built the system by scanning likes for a sample of 58,000 volunteers, and matching them up with other 10 profile details such as age, gender, and relationship status. They also matched up those likes with the results of personality and intelligence tests the volunteers had taken. The team then used their model to make predictions about other volunteers, based solely on their likes. The system can distinguish between the profiles of black and white Facebook users, 15 getting it right 95 percent of the time. It was also 90 percent accurate in separating males and females, Democrats and Republicans. Personality traits like openness and intelligence were also estimated based on likes, and were as accurate in some areas as a standard personality test designed for the task. Mixing what a user likes with many kinds of other data from their real-life activities could improve these predictions even more. 20 Voting records, utility bills and marriage records are already being added to Facebook's database, where they are easier to analyze. Facebook recently partnered with offline data companies, which all collect this kind of information. This move will allow even deeper insights into the behavior of the web users. 25 30 (3) - Sarah Downey, a lawyer and analyst with a privacy technology company, foresees insurers using the information gained by Facebook to help them identify risky customers, and perhaps charge them with higher fees. But there are potential benefits for users, too. Kosinski suggests that Facebook could end up as an online locker for your personal information, releasing your profiles at your command to help you with career planning. Downey says the research is the first solid example of the kinds of insights that can be made through Facebook. "This study is a great example of how the little things you do online show so much about you,” she says. "You might not remember liking things, " but Facebook remembers and (4) it all adds up.", * a 'like': フェイスブック上で個人の好みを表示する機能。 日本語版のフェイスブックでは「いいね!」 と表記される。 2-56 2-57 2-58 36

回答募集中 回答数: 0
英語 高校生

黄色線のhis business が 干渉しないよう という意味になるんですか😵‍💫

3,000 animated characters. 2 Blanc was born on May 30, 1908, in San Francisco, California. However, when he was a child, his family moved to Portland, Oregon, where he attended 問1の正解の根拠 ~へ引っ越した 〜に通った school. When he was young, a game he used to play by himself was to look at, よくしたものだ 一人で for example, a bird, and try to imagine what it would sound like if it could talk. Then, he would try to make the voice that he had imagined. 問1の正解の根拠 ~を集めた 問1の正解の根拠 3 In 1927, Blanc began working for a daily radio program. There, because the sponsors could not afford to hire more actors, Blanc used his own voice for many of the show's characters. After that, he moved to Los Angeles, California, where he joined Leon Schlesinger Productions, an animation studio that had assembled some of the greatest voice actors of the time. This company did the work for Warner Brothers, which developed the cartoons that made Blanc rotair lo subiq soloqu na diw envoys abiyong liw 4 Without a doubt, Blanc's most famous voice is that of Bugs Bunny, the star of the Warner Brothers animated line-up since 1940. Blanc not only provided Bugs Bunny a voice, but also a personality and his famous catch-phrase, "What's up, doc?" The team involved in creating Bugs was very careful about famous. 〜に関わった 問3の正解の根拠 giving him a personality that would be popular for everyone. They decided that Bugs would not be an unkind character; he would just always be peacefully minding his business until someone started trying to hurt him or make him do something he did not want to do. Then, he would fight back. Blanc was very JAKE 問3の正解の根拠 proud of Bugs and thought that the character could be a role model. He said, "Bugs does what most people would like to do but don't have the guts to do." 問2の正解の根拠 5 By the 1940s, Blanc was providing the voices for more than 90 percent of the Warner Brothers cartoon characters. To put that in perspective, from 1940 to 1959, Warner Brothers released almost provided about 540 voices during that time. それを総体的に見ると 600 cartoons. That means Blanc Through this time Blanc appeared on many radio and television programs. He provided the voices for the most 問1の正解の根拠 lovable side characters on extremely popular programs of those days. Then, in the 1960s, he voiced some of the characters in "The Flintstones," the first -126- 生 H

解決済み 回答数: 1
英語 高校生

(1)が分からないので教えて欲しいです。

5 10 15 20 25 S1 夏期講習 第3講 宿題読解(全クラス共通) 次の英文を読んで、 設問に答えなさい。 There is an old saying in English: "Laughter is the best medicine." Until recently, few people took the saying very seriously. Now, however, (1)doctors have begun to investigate laughter and the effects it has on the human body. They have found evidence (2a)that laughter really can improve people's health. Tests were done to study the effects of laughter on the body. People watched funny films, while doctors checked their heart rate, blood pressure, breathing and muscles. It was found ). It increases that laughter has similar effects to ( 3 blood pressure, the heart rate and the rate of breathing; it also works several groups of muscles in the face, the stomach, and even the feet. beneficial. If laughter exercises the body, it must be Other tests have shown that laughter appears to be capable of ( 4 ) the effect of pain on the body. In one experiment doctors produced pain in groups of students who listened to different radio programs. The group which tolerated the pain for the longest time was the group which listened to a funny The reason why laughter can reduce pain seems to program. be that it helps to produce natural chemicals in the brain (2b)that diminish both stress and pain. There is also some evidence to suggest that laughter helps the body's immune system, that is, the system which fights infection. As a result of these discoveries, some doctors and *psychiatrists in the United States now hold laughter clinics, in which they try to improve their patients' condition by ing them to laugh. They have found that even if feel like laughing, (5)making them ilar to those 文法テキスト宿題 p69 4 問1 下線部(1)をitの内容を明らかにして日本語に訳しなさい。 問2 下線部(2a) (2b)と同じ用法の that を含む文を、次のア~オから それぞれ1つずつ選びなさい。 7. He is the man that lives next door to us. 1. It was such a wonderful movie that I saw it five times. 5. The average price of whisky is higher than that of beer. I. No one told me that he had been ill. *. The fact that she lied made him angry. 問3空所(3)に入れるのに最も適当なものを、次のア~エから1 つ選びなさい。 7. mental powers physical exercise 1. vocal exercise I. a good sleep 問4 空所(4)に入れるのに最も適当なものを、次のア~エから1 つ選びなさい。 7. increasing . reducing 1. producing I. encouraging 問5 下線部(5)を them および those の内容を明らかにして日本語に 訳しなさい。

未解決 回答数: 1