BEST IELTS Academic Reading Test 201 » Career Zone Moga
BEST IELTS Academic Reading Test 201
IELTS ACADEMIC READING TEST 201 – PASSAGE – 2
IELTS Academic Reading Test
IELTS ACADEMIC READING TEST – 201
READING PASSAGE – 2
The study of laughter
Humans don’t have a monopoly on laughter, says Silvia Cardoso. A behavioral biologist at the State University of Campinas, Brazil, she says it’s a primitive reflex common to most animal; even rats laugh. She believes that too little laughter could have serious consequences for our mental, physical and social well-being.
Laughter is a universal phenomenon, and one of the most common things we do. We laugh many times a day, for many different reasons, but rarely think about it, and seldom consciously control it. We know so little about the different kinds and functions of laughter, and our interest really starts there. Why do we do it? What can laughter teach us about our positive emotions and social behavior? There’s so much we don’t know about how the brain contributes to emotion and many scientists think we can get at understanding this by studying laughter.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Only 10 or 20 percent of laughing is a response to humor. Most of the time, it’s a message we send to other people, communicating joyful disposition, a willingness to bond and so on. It occupies a special place in social interaction and is a fascinating feature of our biology, with motor, emotional and cognitive components. Scientists study all kinds of emotions and behavior, but few focuses in this most basic ingredient. Laughter gives us a clue that we have powerful systems in our brain which respond to pleasure, happiness and joy. It’s also involved in events such as release of fear.
Many professionals have always focused on emotional behavior. Researchers spent many years investigating the neural basis of fear in rats, and came to laughter via that route. It is noticed that when they were alone, in an exposed environment, they were scared and quite uncomfortable.
Back in a cage with others, they seemed much happier. It looked as if they played with one another real rough and tumble, and researchers wondered whether they were also laughing. The neurobiologist Jaak Panksepp had shown that juvenile rats make short vocalizations, pitched too high for humans to hear, during rough-and-tumble play. He thinks these are similar to laughter. This made us wonder about the roots of laughter.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
We only have to look at the primate closest to humans to see that laughter is clearly not unique to us. This is not too surprising, because humans are only one among many social species and there’s no reason why we should have a monopoly on laughter as a social tool. The great apes, such as chimpanzees, do something similar to humans.
They open their mouths wide, expose their teeth, retract the corners of their lips, and make loud and repetitive vocalizations in situations that tend to evoke human laughter, like when playing with one another or with humans, or when tickled. Laughter may even have evolved long before primates. We know that dogs at play have strange patterns of exhalation that differ from other sounds made during passive or aggressive confrontation.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
But we need to be careful about over-interpreting panting behavior in animals at play. It’s nice to think of it as homologous to human laughter, but it could just be something similar but with entirely different purposes and evolutionary advantages. Everything humans do has a function, and laughing is no exception. Its function is surely communication. We need to build social structures in order to live well in our society and evolution has selected laughter as a useful device for promoting social communication. In other words, it must have a survival advantage for the species.
The brain scans are usually done while people are responding to humorous material. Brainwave activity spread from the sensory processing area of the occipital lobe, the bit at the back of the brain that processes visual signals, to the brain’s frontal lobe. It seems that the frontal lobe is involved in recognizing things as funny. The left side of the frontal lobe analyses the words and structure of jokes while the right side does the intellectual analyses required to “get” jokes.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Finally, activity spreads to the motor areas of the brain controlling the physical task of laughing. Researchers also found out that these complex pathways involved in laughter from neurological illness and injury. Sometimes after brain damage, tumors, stroke or brain disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, people get “stonefaced” syndrome and can’t laugh.
We are sure that laughter should differ between the sexes, particularly the uses to which the sexes put laughter as a social tool. For instance, women smile more than laugh, and are particularly adept at smiling and laughing with men as a kind of “social lubricant”. It might even be possible that this has a biological origin, because women don’t or can’t use their physical size as a threat, which men do, even if unconsciously.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Laughter is believed to be one of the best medicines. For one thing, it’s exercise. It activates the cardiovascular system, so heart rate and blood pressure increase, then the arteries dilate, causing blood pressure to fall again. Repeated short, strong contractions of the chest muscles, diaphragm and abdomen increase blood flow into our internal organs, and forced respiration –the ha! ha! –making sure that this blood is well oxygenated. Muscle tension decreases, and indeed we may temporarily lose control of our limbs, as in the expression “weak with laughter”.
It may also release brain endorphins, reducing sensitivity to pain and boosting endurance and pleasurable sensations. Some studies suggest that laughter affects the immune system by reducing the production of hormones associated with stress, and what when you laugh the immune system produces more T-cells. But no rigorously controlled studies have confirmed these effects. Laughter’s social role is definitely important.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Today’s children may be heading for a whole lot of social ills because their play and leisure time is so isolated and they lose out on lots of chances for laughter. When children stare at computer screens, rather than laughing with each other, this is at odds with what’s natural for them.
Natural social behavior in children is playful behavior, and in such situations laughter indicates that make-believe aggression is just fun, not for real, and this is an important way in which children from positive emotional bonds, gain new social skills and generally start to move from childhood to adulthood. Parents need to be very careful to ensure that their children play in groups, with both peers and adult, and laugh more.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Questions 14-15
Which of the following claims and arguments are presented in the passage above?
Choose TWO letters from A-E
A. All animals share the phenomenon of laughter.
B. Laughter can influence both adult and child health.
C. Laughter is not unique to humans.
D. Human mental, physical and social well-being are closely related.
E. Laughter teaches us how to behave.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Questions 16-20
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 2?
On your answer sheet please write
YES – if the statement agrees with the writer
NO – if the statement contradicts with the writer
NOT GIVEN – if there is no information about this in the passage.
16. Laughter is one of the most common expressions shared by all humans.
17. There are complicated systems in the human brain that take the responsibility of our emotions as happiness and fear.
18. Communication is the only purpose of laughter.
19. Reduced blood pressure would lead to a stimulated cardiovascular system.
20. With the mass production of T-cells from the laughter, stress hormones would be deducted from the immune system.
IELTS Academic Reading Test
Questions 21-26
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Emotional behavior takes academic concerns. For years scientists have been examining the origin of (21)……. and laughter that comes from the same route as rats. Within an open environment, they have been noticed to be (22)……. when they are alone, and happier when they are back with others. Jaak Panksepp even found that rats make (23)……. when they are in a chaotic state. It is well understand that humans are not the only living species that laughs and laughter may have developed long before (24)…….. Despite such facts, we need to pay attention when we explain various animal behavior, as they may express with differed (25)……. and (26)……. .
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ANSWERS ARE BELOW
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IELTS Academic Reading Test
ANSWERS
14. B
15. C (14 -15 IN ANY ORDER)
16. YES
17. YES
18. NOT GIVEN
19. NO
20. NOT GIVEN
21. FEAR
22. SCARE/UNCOMFORTABLE
23. (SHORT) VOCALIZATIONS
24. PRIMATES
25. PURPOSES
26. EVOLUTIONARY ADVANTAGES
IELTS Academic Reading Test