Ielts reading recent actual tests (2016 2017) with answers published by ieltsmaterial com



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[Ebook] IELTS Reading Recent Tests with Answer Key.pdf ( PDFDrive )

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that this guilt occurs much more among middle-class viewers than among less affluent 
ones. 
D
What is it about TV that has such a hold on us? In part, the attraction seems to spring 
from our biological 'orienting response/ First described by Ivan Pavlov in 1927, the 
orienting response is our instinctive visual or auditory reaction to any sudden or novel 
stimulus. It is part of our evolutionary heritage, a built-in sensitivity to movement and 
potential predatory threats. In 1986 Byron Reeves of Stanford University, Esther Thorson 
of the University of Missouri and their colleagues began to study whether the simple 
formal features of television
—cuts, edits, zooms, pans, sudden noises — activate the 
orienting response, thereby keeping attention on the screen. By watching how brain 
waves were affected by formal features, the researchers concluded that these stylistic 
tricks can indeed trigger involuntary responses and 'derive their attentional value through 
the evolutionary significance of detecting movement.... It is the form, not the content, of 
television that is unique. 
E
The natural attraction to television's sound and light starts very early in life. Dafna 
Lemish of Tel Aviv University has described babies at six to eight weeks attending to 
television. We have observed slightly older infants who, when lying on their backs on the 
floor, crane their necks around 180 degrees to catch what light through yonder window 
breaks. This inclination suggests how deeply rooted the orienting response is. 
F
The Experience Sampling Method permitted us to look closely at most every domain of 
everyday life: working, eating, reading, talking to friends, playing a sport, and so on. We 
found that heavy viewers report feeling significantly more anxious and less happy than 
light viewers do in unstructured situations, such as doing nothing, daydreaming or waiting 
in line. The difference widens when the viewer is alone. Subsequently, Robert D. 
Mcllwraith of the University of Manitoba extensively studied those who called themselves 
TV addicts on surveys. On a measure called the Short Imaginal Processes Inventory 
(SIPI), he found that the self-described addicts are more easily bored and distracted and 
have poorer attentional control than the non-addicts. The addicts said they used TV to 
distract themselves from unpleasant thoughts and to fill time. Other studies over the years 



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