IELTS LD_TEST 1_READING

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.

 

Wooden Buildings

 

Using wood as a construction material for large buildings is an ancient practice. The 67-metre-high Sakyamuni Pagoda in China was constructed in 1056, while Japan's Horyu-ji Temple is even older, dating from the 7th or 8th century. That these magnificent structures have survived for over a thousand years is evidence of wood's strength and durability as a building material. Still today, 80% of houses in the USA are built of wood. In Australia the proportion is slightly smaller since stone is also a popular choice, particularly in the southern states, while in New Zealand the figure is more like 85%. Certainly, there are problems associated with wooden constructions: wood can rot when exposed to water and is said to be a fire risk. However, with modern technology these issues can be eliminated, which has led to a dramatic renewal of interest in wood as a building material in recent years.

Today, architects and engineers recognise the potential of wood not only for private homes but also for larger multi-storey offices and apartment blocks. In 2015, a 52.8-metre wooden tower block was constructed in Norway, then a world record for an apartment block, but this was soon surpassed by a 53-metre student dormitory at the University of British Columbia in Canada. Then came the 84-metre HoHo building in Vienna, home to a hotel, offices and apartments. Although the HoHo building has a concrete core, most of the structure as well as the floors are built of wood. Many of these advances have been made possible by research at the Technical Institute in Graz, Austria, where new engineering systems based on wood construction have been pioneered.

A good example of these techniques is found at the Wood Innovation and Design Centre at the University of Northern British Columbia, Canada. The first stage in the construction of the building saw large planks of Douglas fir being fastened to one another with glue, which these days can be stronger than nails or screws. This produced large heavy sheets of wooden material; these became the basic structural components for the building. These sheets then had to be precision cut to create the thousands of columns and beams necessary - the team employed lasers for this purpose. Once the cutting work was complete, all the wooden components were taken to the site for assembly. The building was constructed one storey at a time, layer upon layer, not unlike the system used to make a large cake. Once the eighth and final storey was completed, the building reached a height of 30 metres and became a notable landmark in its neighbourhood. And, of course, one of the great advantages of wood comes at the end of a building's life, in around 100 years' time. When the Wood Innovation and Design Centre eventually has to be demolished, it will be possible for its principal building material to be recycled, which is not usually practical with steel or concrete.

Other significant wooden buildings are to be found in locations around the world. Perhaps not surprisingly, given that the Horyu-ji Temple may be the oldest large wooden building in the world, Japanese engineers are at the forefront of this process. One thing that has been learned from maintaining the Horyu-ji Temple over many centuries is that it is often simpler to make major repairs to wooden structures than to those made of concrete and steel. Until quite recently, regulations in Japan have made the construction of very large wooden structures difficult. However, in recognition of new technologies, these are being relaxed by the government, with the result that ever more ambitious projects are being announced. Perhaps the most radical example is the proposed Sumitomo Tower, a skyscraper of 70 storeys to be built largely of wood in central Tokyo; its completion date is 2041.

Because wood is more flexible than steel, it has great potential in countries prone to earthquakes, such as Japan and New Zealand. Engineers in New Zealand believe that wood construction can significantly improve building safety in the event of a natural disaster, as has been demonstrated at the new Wynn Williams House. The wood has been left exposed inside the house to showcase how this type of construction provides attractive interiors as well. Another advantage of wood is that it is so light, particularly when compared to steel and concrete. In Australia, the benefits of light weight have been taken advantage of in the city of Melbourne, where a large wooden library has been constructed directly beside water, on land so soft that a heavier building would have been impossible. Furthermore, wood is advantageous even in extreme climates. In Finland, where winter temperatures can fall to -30°C, wood provides all the load-bearing structures for the Puukuokka Block, but also guarantees excellent heat insulation as well.

As wood construction technologies continue to develop, it seems probable that architects and engineers will dream up ever more uses for this practical. flexible and beautiful building material.

Questions 1-4

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?

In boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet, write

TRUE               if the statement agrees with the information

FALSE             if the statement contradicts the information

NOT GIVEN     if there is no information on this

Question :
1
false
More houses are built of wood in Australia than in the USA. Câu hỏi nói rằng ở Úc có nhiều nhà xây bằng gỗ hơn ở Mỹ. Trong đoạn 1 có câu: “Still today, 80% of houses in the USA are built of wood. In Australia the proportion is slightly smaller since stone is also a popular choice, particularly in the southern states…” → Tức là tỷ lệ nhà gỗ ở Úc nhỏ hơn so với Mỹ → Thông tin trái ngược với câu hỏi → FALSE
2
true
There are solutions to the problems of building with wood. Đoạn 1 nêu rõ: “Certainly, there are problems associated with wooden constructions: wood can rot when exposed to water and is said to be a fire risk. However, with modern technology these issues can be eliminated, which has led to a dramatic renewal of interest in wood as a building material in recent years.” → Công nghệ hiện đại có thể loại bỏ các vấn đề của gỗ như thối rữa và cháy → TRUE
3
not given
Several different species of tree were used to construct the HoHo building. Đoạn 2 viết: “Although the HoHo building has a concrete core, most of the structure, as well as the floors, are built of wood.” → Câu này chỉ nói “wood” nói chung, không đề cập đến loại cây cụ thể hay nhiều giống cây → NOT GIVEN
4
false - True
Research at the Technical Institute in Graz improved wooden building technology. Cuối đoạn 2 nêu rõ: “Many of these advances have been made possible by research at the Technical Institute in Graz, Austria, where new engineering systems based on wood construction have been pioneered.” → Nghiên cứu ở viện kỹ thuật Graz đã giúp phát triển các hệ thống xây dựng mới từ gỗ → TRUE
Questions 5-8

Complete the flow-chart below.

Write ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 5-8 on your answers sheet.

5
glue//Glue
“The first stage in the construction of the building saw large planks of Douglas fir being fastened to one another with glue, which these days can be stronger than nails or screws.” → Gỗ được kết dính bằng glue → glue
6
laser - lasers//Lasers
Ngay sau đó: “These sheets then had to be precision-cut to create the thousands of columns and beams necessary – the team employed lasers for this purpose.” → Dùng lasers để cắt chính xác các tấm gỗ → lasers
7
cake//Cake
Vẫn trong đoạn 3: “The building was constructed one storey at a time, layer upon layer, not unlike the system used to make a large cake.” → Cách xây giống cách làm bánh nhiều lớp → cake
8
recycle - recycled//Recycled
Câu cuối đoạn 3: “When the Wood Innovation and Design Centre eventually has to be demolished, it will be possible for its principal building material to be recycled, which is not usually practical with steel or concrete.” → Gỗ có thể recycled sau 100 năm → recycled
Questions 9-13

Complete the notes below.

Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.

Other Significant Wooden Buildings

Japan:

  •   Experience with the Horyu-ji Temple proves that 9 ………………… are easier with wood.
  •   New technologies and new 10 ………………… make large buildings such as Sumitomo Tower possible.

 

Other Countries:

  •   Wynn Williams House in New Zealand is earthquake-proof and is an example of how wooden buildings can have 11 ………………… .
  •   Wood is so light that a new library in Australia was built right next to 12 ………………… .
  •   Finland’s Puukuokka Block illustrates that wood provides a good 13 ………………… in addition to structural strength.
9
repairs//Repairs//major repairs//Major repairs
Đầu đoạn 4: “One thing that has been learned from maintaining the Höryü-ji Temple over many centuries is that it is often simpler to make major repairs to wooden structures than to those made of concrete and steel.” → Việc sửa chữa lớn với gỗ dễ hơn → (major) repairs
10
regulations//Regulations
Tiếp theo đó: “Until quite recently, regulations in Japan have made the construction of very large wooden structures difficult. However, in recognition of new technologies, these are being relaxed by the government…” → Quy định đang được nới lỏng nhờ công nghệ mới → regulations
11
attractive interiors//Attractive interiors
Đoạn 5 (New Zealand): “The wood has been left exposed inside the house to showcase how this type of construction provides attractive interiors as well.” → Gỗ để lộ ra tạo cảm giác nội thất đẹp → attractive interiors
12
water//Water
Vẫn đoạn 5 (Australia): “In Australia, the benefits of lightweight have been taken advantage of in the city of Melbourne, where a large wooden library has been constructed directly beside the water, on land so soft that a heavier building would have been impossible.” → Xây thư viện gỗ cạnh water → water
13
insulation//heat insulation//Heat insulation//Insulation
Cuối đoạn 5 (Finland): “…wood provides all the load-bearing structures for the Puukuokka Block but also guarantees excellent heat insulation as well.” → Gỗ vừa chịu lực tốt, vừa cách nhiệt tốt → (heat) insulation

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.

 

Changes in reading habits

What are the implications of the way we read today?

 

Look around on your next plane trip. The iPad is the new pacifier for babies and toddlers. Younger school-aged children read stories on smartphones; older kids don’t read at all, but hunch over video games. Parents and other passengers read on tablets or skim a flotilla of email and news feeds. Unbeknown to most of us, an invisible, game-changing transformation links everyone in this picture: the neuronal circuit that underlies the brain’s ability to read is subtly, rapidly changing and this has implications for everyone from the pre-reading toddler to the expert adult.

As work in neurosciences indicates, the acquisition of literacy necessitated a new circuit in our species’ brain more than 6,000 years ago. That circuit evolved from a very simple mechanism for decoding basic information, like the number of goats in one’s herd, to the present, highly elaborated reading brain. My research depicts how the present reading brain enables the development of some of our most important intellectual and affective processes: internalized knowledge, analogical reasoning, and inference; perspective-taking and empathy; critical analysis and the generation of insight. Research surfacing in many parts of the world now cautions that each of these essential ‘deep reading’ processes may be under threat as we move into digital-based modes of reading.

This is not a simple, binary issue of print versus digital reading and technological innovations. As MIT scholar Sherry Turkle has written, we do not err as a society when we innovate but when we ignore what we disrupt or diminish while innovating. In this hinge moment between print and digital cultures, society needs to confront what is diminishing in the expert reading circuit, what our children and older students are not developing, and what we can do about it.

We know from research that the reading circuit is not given to human beings through a genetic blueprint like vision or language; it needs an environment to develop. Further, it will adapt to that environment’s requirements – from different writing systems to the characteristics of whatever medium is used. If the dominant medium advantages processes that are fast, multi-task oriented and well-suited for large volumes of information, like the current digital medium, so will the reading circuit. As UCLA psychologist Patricia Greenfield writes, the result is that less attention and time will be allocated to slower, time-demanding deep reading processes.

Increasing reports from educators and from researchers in psychology and the humanities bear this out. English literature scholar and teacher Mark Edmundson describes how many college students actively avoid the classic literature of the 19th and 20th centuries in favour of something simpler as they no longer have the patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts. We should be less concerned with students’ ‘cognitive impatience’, however, than by what may underlie it: the potential inability of large numbers of students to read with a level of critical analysis sufficient to comprehend the complexity of thought and argument found in more demanding texts.

Multiple studies show that digital screen use may be causing a variety of troubling downstream effects on reading comprehension in older high school and college students. In Stavanger, Norway, psychologist Anne Mangen and colleagues studied how high school students comprehend the same material in different mediums. Mangen’s group asked subjects questions about a short story whose plot had universal student appeal; half of the students read the story on a tablet, the other half in paperback. Results indicated that students who read on print were superior in their comprehension to screen-reading peers, particularly in their ability to sequence detail and reconstruct the plot in chronological order.

Ziming Liu from San Jose State University has conducted a series of studies which indicate that the ‘new norm’ in reading is skimming, involving word-spotting and browsing through the text. Many readers now use a pattern when reading in which they sample the first line and then word-spot through the rest of the text. When the reading brain skims like this, it reduces time allocated to deep reading processes. In other words, we don’t have time to grasp complexity, to understand another’s feelings, to perceive beauty, and to create thoughts of the reader’s own.

The possibility that critical analysis, empathy and other deep reading processes could become the unintended ‘collateral damage’ of our digital culture is not a straightforward binary issue about print versus digital reading. It is about how we all have begun to read on various mediums and how that changes not only what we read, but also the purposes for which we read. Nor is it only about the young. The subtle atrophy of critical analysis and empathy affects us all equally. It affects our ability to navigate a constant bombardment of information. It incentivizes a retreat to the most familiar stores of unchecked information, which require and receive no analysis, leaving us susceptible to false information and irrational ideas.

There’s an old rule in neuroscience that does not alter with age: use it or lose it. It is a very hopeful principle when applied to critical thought in the reading brain because it implies choice. The story of the changing reading brain is hardly finished. We possess both the science and the technology to identify and redress the changes in how we read before they become entrenched. If we work to understand exactly what we will lose, alongside the extraordinary new capacities that the digital world has brought us, there is as much reason for excitement as caution.

Questions 14-17

Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.

Write the correct letter in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.

14
What is the writer’s main point in the first paragraph?

Đáp án và giải thích

Câu đầu tiên nêu hiện tượng phổ biến:
“The iPad is the new pacifier for babies and toddlers. Younger school-aged children read stories on smartphones; older kids don’t read at all, but hunch over video games.”

Sau đó, câu kết đoạn chỉ ra vấn đề:
“An invisible, game-changing transformation links everyone in this picture: the neuronal circuit that underlies the brain’s ability to read is subtly, rapidly changing and this has implications for everyone...”

⇒ Tác giả muốn nói rằng việc đọc đang thay đổi theo hướng công nghệ, và điều đó ảnh hưởng đến cấu trúc thần kinh của nãoA. Our use of technology is having a hidden effect on us.

15
What main point does Sherry Turkle make about innovation?

Đáp án và giải thích

Trong đoạn 3 có câu:
“As MIT scholar Sherry Turkle has written, we do not err as a society when we innovate but when we ignore what we disrupt or diminish while innovating.”
→ Tức là lỗi không nằm ở việc đổi mới, mà ở việc phớt lờ những gì bị đánh mất trong quá trình đổi mớiB. We should pay attention to what might be lost when innovation occurs.

16
What point is the writer making in the fourth paragraph?

Đáp án và giải thích

Đoạn 4 nêu:
“We know from research that the reading circuit is not given to human beings through a genetic blueprint like vision or language; it needs an environment to develop. Further, it will adapt to that environment’s requirements…”
→ Tức là não không được lập trình sẵn để đọc, mà hệ thống thần kinh đọc sẽ thích nghi với yêu cầu từ môi trường, ví dụ như thiết bị đọc → D. Some brain circuits adjust to whatever is required of them.

17
According to Mark Edmundson, the attitude of college students

Đáp án và giải thích

Trong đoạn 5 có câu:
“Mark Edmundson describes how many college students actively avoid the classic literature of the 19th and 20th centuries in favour of something simpler as they no longer have the patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts.”
→ Sinh viên chọn đọc những thứ dễ hơn vì không đủ kiên nhẫn đọc văn bản phức tạp → B. has influenced what they select to read.

Questions 18-22

Complete the summary using the list of words, A-H, below.

Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 18-22 on your answer sheet.

 

Studies on digital screen use

There have been many studies on digital screen use, showing some 18 ………………… trends. Psychologist Anne Mangen gave high-school students a short story to read, half using digital and half using print mediums. Her team then used a question-and-answer technique to find out how 19 ………………… each group’s understanding of the plot was. The findings showed a clear pattern in the responses, with those who read screens finding the order of information 20 ………………… to recall.

Studies by Ziming Liu show that students are tending to read 21 ………………… words and phrases in a text to save time. This approach, she says, gives the reader a superficial understanding of the 22 ………………… content of material, leaving no time for thought.

 

 A     fast

 B     isolated               

 C     emotional           

 D     worrying

 E     many       

 F     hard                     

 G     combined           

 H     thorough

18
D
“Multiple studies show that digital screen use may be causing a variety of troubling downstream effects on reading comprehension…” → Tác giả dùng từ troubling, nghĩa tương đương với worrying → D. worrying
19
H
Đoạn 6: “Results indicated that students who read on print were superior in their comprehension to screen-reading peers, particularly in their ability to sequence detail and reconstruct the plot in chronological order.” → So sánh khả năng hiểu sâu, khả năng tái hiện tình tiết, tức là khả năng hiểu thorough → H. thorough
20
F
Từ đoạn 6: “...particularly in their ability to sequence detail and reconstruct the plot in chronological order.” → Những người đọc trên màn hình gặp khó khăn trong việc nhớ trình tự → F. hard
21
B
Đoạn 7: “The ‘new norm’ in reading is skimming, involving word-spotting and browsing through the text.” → Hành vi đọc “nhảy cóc” qua các từ riêng lẻ → B. isolated
22
A - C
Câu cuối đoạn 7: “In other words, we don’t have time to grasp complexity, to understand another’s feelings, to perceive beauty, and to create thoughts of the reader’s own.” → Không đủ thời gian để hiểu cảm xúc và các tầng sâu sắc → C. emotional
Questions 23-26

Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in Reading Passage 2?

In boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet, write

YES                      if the statement agrees with the views of the writer

NO                       if the statement contradicts the views of the writer

NOT GIVEN          if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

Question :
23
yes
The medium we use to read can affect our choice of reading content. “It is about how we all have begun to read on various mediums and how that changes not only what we read, but also the purposes for which we read.” → Thiết bị (medium) ảnh hưởng đến nội dung được chọn → TRUE
24
no
Some age groups are more likely to lose their complex reading skills than others. “The subtle atrophy of critical analysis and empathy affects us all equally.” → Ảnh hưởng xảy ra đối với tất cả mọi người như nhau, không phân biệt độ tuổi → FALSE
25
no - Not given
False information has become more widespread in today’s digital era. Đoạn 8 đề cập: “…leaving us susceptible to false information and irrational ideas.” → Tác giả nói về khả năng dễ bị ảnh hưởng, nhưng không khẳng định false info đang lan rộng → NOT GIVEN
26
yes
We still have opportunities to rectify the problems that technology is presenting. Đoạn cuối cùng: “We possess both the science and the technology to identify and redress the changes in how we read before they become entrenched.” → Chúng ta vẫn có thể điều chỉnh kịp thời → TRUE

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.

 

Attitudes towards Artificial Intelligence

A

Artificial intelligence (AI) can already predict the future. Police forces are using it to map when and where crime is likely to occur. Doctors can use it to predict when a patient is most likely to have a heart attack or stroke. Researchers are even trying to give AI imagination so it can plan for unexpected consequences.

Many decisions in our lives require a good forecast, and AI is almost always better at forecasting than we are. Yet for all these technological advances, we still seem to deeply lack confidence in AI predictions. Recent cases show that people don’t like relying on AI and prefer to trust human experts, even if these experts are wrong.

If we want AI to really benefit people, we need to find a way to get people to trust it. To do that, we need to understand why people are so reluctant to trust AI in the first place.

 

B

Take the case of Watson for Oncology, one of technology giant IBM’s supercomputer programs. Their attempt to promote this program to cancer doctors was a PR disaster. The AI promised to deliver top-quality recommendations on the treatment of 12 cancers that accounted for 80% of the world’s cases. But when doctors first interacted with Watson, they found themselves in a rather difficult situation. On the one hand, if Watson provided guidance about a treatment that coincided with their own opinions, physicians did not see much point in Watson’s recommendations. The supercomputer was simply telling them what they already knew, and these recommendations did not change the actual treatment.

On the other hand, if Watson generated a recommendation that contradicted the experts’ opinion, doctors would typically conclude that Watson wasn’t competent. And the machine wouldn’t be able to explain why its treatment was plausible because its machine-learning algorithms were simply too complex to be fully understood by humans. Consequently, this has caused even more suspicion and disbelief, leading many doctors to ignore the seemingly outlandish AI recommendations and stick to their own expertise.

 

C

This is just one example of people’s lack of confidence in AI and their reluctance to accept what AI has to offer. Trust in other people is often based on our understanding of how others think and having experience of their reliability. This helps create a psychological feeling of safety. AI, on the other hand, is still fairly new and unfamiliar to most people. Even if it can be technically explained (and that’s not always the case), AI’s decision-making process is usually too difficult for most people to comprehend. And interacting with something we don’t understand can cause anxiety and give us a sense that we’re losing control.

Many people are also simply not familiar with many instances of AI actually working, because it often happens in the background. Instead, they are acutely aware of instances where AI goes wrong. Embarrassing AI failures receive a disproportionate amount of media attention, emphasising the message that we cannot rely on technology. Machine learning is not foolproof, in part because the humans who design it aren’t.

 

D

Feelings about AI run deep. In a recent experiment, people from a range of backgrounds were given various sci-fi films about AI to watch and then asked questions about automation in everyday life. It was found that, regardless of whether the film they watched depicted AI in a positive or negative light, simply watching a cinematic vision of our technological future polarised the participants’ attitudes. Optimists became more extreme in their enthusiasm for AI and sceptics became even more guarded.

This suggests people use relevant evidence about AI in a biased manner to support their existing attitudes, a deep-rooted human tendency known as “confirmation bias”. As AI is represented more and more in media and entertainment, it could lead to a society split between those who benefit from AI and those who reject it. More pertinently, refusing to accept the advantages offered by AI could place a large group of people at a serious disadvantage.

 

E

Fortunately, we already have some ideas about how to improve trust in AI. Simply having previous experience with AI can significantly improve people’s opinions about the technology, as was found in the study mentioned above. Evidence also suggests the more you use other technologies such as the internet, the more you trust them.

Another solution may be to reveal more about the algorithms which AI uses and the purposes they serve. Several high-profile social media companies and online marketplaces already release transparency reports about government requests and surveillance disclosures. A similar practice for AI could help people have a better understanding of the way algorithmic decisions are made.

 

F

Research suggests that allowing people some control over AI decision-making could also improve trust and enable AI to learn from human experience. For example, one study showed that when people were allowed the freedom to slightly modify an algorithm, they felt more satisfied with its decisions, more likely to believe it was superior and more likely to use it in the future.

We don’t need to understand the intricate inner workings of AI systems, but if people are given a degree of responsibility for how they are implemented, they will be more willing to accept AI into their lives.

Questions 27-32

Reading Passage 3 has six sections, A-F.

Choose the correct heading for each section from the list of headings below.

Write the correct number, i-viii, in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet.

 

List of Headings

 i       An increasing divergence of attitudes towards AI

 ii      Reasons why we have more faith in human judgement than in AI

 iii     The superiority of AI projections over those made by humans

 iv     The process by which AI can help us make good decisions

 v      The advantages of involving users in AI processes

 vi     Widespread distrust of an AI innovation

 vii    Encouraging openness about how AI functions

 viii   A surprisingly successful AI application

 

27
iii
Section A Toàn đoạn A nói về khả năng dự đoán của AI: “AI is almost always better at forecasting than we are.” → Đoạn này nhấn mạnh AI có khả năng dự đoán vượt trội, nhưng con người vẫn không tin AI → Heading iii
28
vi
Section B Cả đoạn nói về trường hợp thất bại của Watson for Oncology, khi các bác sĩ không tin AI dù AI đưa ra khuyến nghị: “Doctors would typically conclude that Watson wasn’t competent.” → Nêu ví dụ cụ thể về một ứng dụng AI không được tin tưởng → Heading vi
29
ii
Section C Đoạn này lý giải tại sao con người tin người hơn tin AI, vì không hiểu AI, lo lắng mất kiểm soát: “Even if it can be technically explained, AI’s decision-making process is usually too difficult for most people to comprehend.” → Trình bày rõ lý do con người ít tin AI hơn chuyên gia → Heading ii
30
iv - i
Section D Đoạn D cho thấy phản ứng trái chiều với AI: “Simply watching a cinematic vision of our technological future polarised the participants’ attitudes.” → Tức là sự phân hóa thái độ càng rõ rệt giữa người ủng hộ và hoài nghi → Heading i
31
i - vii
Section E Đoạn E đề xuất: “Another solution may be to reveal more about the algorithms which AI uses and the purposes they serve.” → Đề xuất tăng tính minh bạch về cơ chế hoạt động AI → Heading vii
32
v
Section F Đoạn cuối nói rõ rằng người dùng có thể điều chỉnh AI sẽ tin và sử dụng AI hơn: “When people were allowed the freedom to slightly modify an algorithm, they felt more satisfied with its decisions...” → Nhấn mạnh lợi ích của việc để người dùng tham gia vào quá trình AI → Heading v
Questions 33-35

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

Write the correct letter in boxes 33-35 on your answer sheet.

33
What is the writer doing in Section A?

Đáp án và giải thích

Đoạn A nêu ra nghịch lý:
“AI is almost always better at forecasting than we are. Yet... we still seem to deeply lack confidence in AI predictions.”
→ Tác giả chỉ ra mâu thuẫn giữa khả năng AI và sự thiếu tin tưởng từ con người → C

34
According to Section C, why might some people be reluctant to accept AI?

Đáp án và giải thích

Đoạn C:
“Even if it can be technically explained... AI’s decision-making process is usually too difficult for most people to comprehend.”
→ Do AI quá phức tạp, gây cảm giác mất kiểm soát, con người thấy mình yếu thế → B

35
What does the writer say about the media in Section C of the text?

Đáp án và giải thích

Cuối đoạn C:
“Embarrassing AI failures receive a disproportionate amount of media attention, emphasising the message that we cannot rely on technology.”
→ Truyền thông nhấn vào thất bại của AI, làm giảm lòng tin của công chúngA

Questions 36-40

Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?

In boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet, write

 

 YES                                   if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer

 NO                                    if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer

 NOT GIVEN                      if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

 

Question :
36
no
Subjective depictions of AI in sci-fi films make people change their opinions about automation. Đoạn D nói: “Optimists became more extreme... sceptics became even more guarded.” → Tức là người xem không đổi ý, mà chỉ củng cố niềm tin có sẵn → NO
37
no - Not given
Portrayals of AI in media and entertainment are likely to become more positive. Đoạn D có nói về ảnh hưởng của phim ảnh, nhưng không dự đoán xu hướng tương lai tích cực hơn → NOT GIVEN
38
yes
Rejection of the possibilities of AI may have a negative effect on many people’s lives. Cuối đoạn D: “Refusing to accept the advantages offered by AI could place a large group of people at a serious disadvantage.” → Rõ ràng là từ chối AI có thể khiến nhiều người gặp bất lợi → YES
39
not given - No
Familiarity with AI has very little impact on people’s attitudes to the technology. Đầu đoạn E: “Simply having previous experience with AI can significantly improve people’s opinions…” → Trải nghiệm AI có ảnh hưởng lớn đến thái độ → NO
40
yes
AI applications which users are able to modify are more likely to gain consumer approval. Đoạn F: “They felt more satisfied with its decisions... more likely to use it in the future.” → Khi được tùy chỉnh, người dùng thấy AI đáng tin và sẵn sàng dùng hơn → YES
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