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Text 1

 

Are Dreams as Vital as Sleep?

More about dreams
    Do Spider and Tiger dream? Yes. There is evidence that almost all mammals do. But animal dreams probably lack the storylike quality of some human dreams. Dreams probably help animals learn and remember skills needed for survival. So a kitten that learns to catch mice might dream about the skill, helping its brain to store the memory. In Are Dreams as Vital as Sleep? the writer seems to be establishing a sort of relationship between the brain and dreams.
     According to the recent researches, dreams result from random bursts of activity in a brain stem area that regulates breathing and other basic bodily functions. These brain stem blasts zip to the frontal brain during periods of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, when the entire brain becomes nearly as active as when a person is awake. Dreams most often occur during REM sleep. A slumbering individual enters REM sleep about every 90 minutes. Three essential processes during REM sleep make it the prime time for dreaming. First, brain stem activity surges and sets off responses in emotional and visual parts of the brain. Second, brain regions that handle sensations from the outside world, control movement, and carry out logical analysis shut down. Third, brain stem cells pump out acetylcholine, a chemical messenger that jacks up activity in emotional centers. At the same time, two neurotransmitters essential for waking activity—noradrenaline and serotonin—take a snooze.
    REM sleep conducts far more important business than dreaming. Its central functions may include supporting brain development, regulating body temperature, fortifying the immune system, and fostering memories of recently learned information. To dream, the brain—both in and out of REM sleep—stimulates a frontal-lobe system that orchestrates motivation and the pursuit of goals and cravings, one British scientist proposes. A neurotransmitter called dopamine ferries messages in the brain's motivation system. If the REM state in one form or another saturates much of sleep, then the brain stem and related emotional centers create dreams throughout the night.


Language notes



1. It even occurred to us that it might be connected with the very special role that whiskers play in the cat, and we actually tried cutting them off to see whether this might have some effect.

It even occurred to us means an idea comes to our mind.
Tried cutting them off means to cut them off to see the result of.

 

2.This research was carried out in collaboration with Kleitman and Dement in the United States, among others.

Among others means among other people.


3.We can identify, to within one second, the instance he begins to dream and the instance his dream ends.

The preposition "to" is used here to show degree.

 

4.The center controlling muscular tone, which is no bigger than a grape seed, lives his dreams.

The word live can also be used as a transitive verb meaning to "to experience ,or cause to become vivid"


5. It is not a coincidence that the physician chosen to participate in the first trip to the moon planned by the Americans is a specialist in sleep.

It is not a coincidence that means " it is not by chance that."


Text 2

Mind over Time

About the author


    Dr. Mark Caldwell, Professor of Literature, Fordham University, is a voluminous writer. He is the author of The Last Crusade: The American War on Consumption, 1880- 1954. Dr. Caldwell has written extensively on the texts and symbols of the American response to tuberculosis. Mark Caldwell's interest is wide-ranged. He once published many articles in Discover which include the famous Mind over Time and Polly wanna PhD?.


About the text


    Recent discoveries are uncovering the once-mysterious workings of the body's biological clocks. Apparently at the center of timekeeping, a cluster of nerve cells called the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), located just above the optic nerves' convergence at the base of the brain, depends on light for what circadian-clock researchers call entrainment—synchronizing the inner clock with the cycles of light and darkness in the external world. The SCN is a pair of structures, divided between the right and left brain hemispheres, and each consists of about 10,000 densely packed neurons, according to Steven Reppert of Harvard University. The development of therapies based on the workings of circadian clocks is discussed.


Language notes


1.It came up on me gradually, over time.

The phrase "over time" is equivalent to "with the change of season".


2.Some SAD sufferers, he says, simply gravitate toward a lifestyle that accommodates the disease.

In this sentence the phrase "gravitate toward" means to be attracted by and move gradually toward.
    e.g. In the 19th century, industry gravitated towards the north of England.


3.The bleary-eyed miseries of jet lag are a familiar example of what can happen when you're hurled across time zones and your personal clock bumps out of sync with the pace of the rest of the world.

In the sentence, the phrase "out of sync" means not going properly together. The word "sync" refers to a correct working arrangement or synchronization.


4. Baby Bens: Baby Bens refers to those clocks manufactured by Westclox. The Big Ben alarm clock was first sold in 1909 and has evolved through many case style and movement changes. The Baby Ben was first sold in 1910 and has evolved in a similar way.


5.These photoreceptors are different from the rods and cones used to perceive light hitting the retina.

 Rods and cones:视杆与视锥.
Used to perceive light hitting the retina is a past participle phrase used as an attributive.
Hitting the retina is also used as an attributive modifying light.


6. Not everyone has the problem... When natural light is scarce, the best way to reset the inner clock is with a burst of artificial light......
Note the useful expressions in this paragraph:
In tune with:与……谐调.
In synchrony with:……同步,其反义词是out of sync.
In step with:……节奏一致.


7. Underneath it all is one clock, the clock in the cell.

The word "it" refers to the single neuron mentioned in the above sentence.


8. In later treatments Lewy worked the dosage down to two hours of exposure a day at an intensity of 2,500 lux, which approximates the strength of natural light just after the sun has fully risen.

Lux : a unit used to measure light, its plural form is lux(es) or luces.


9. Within days, Jason's depression dissipated, his sleep habits returned to normal, and the sweet tooth cravings became somewhat less pronounced.

Somewhat less pronounced means not frequently mentioned.

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