逐日听力

逐日听力内容来自BBC英语六分钟,英式英语,逐日更新,和实际生活密切干系。
每个听力文件6分钟,而且每次都有听力题目,可以用来备考四六级等各种英语考试考试。

每日听力|BBC六分钟6 Minute EnglishAre we there yet 休闲娱乐

听力方法:1. 听3-5遍以上,2. 对照文本听2遍,并查5-10个单词 3. 盲听5遍以上。
4. 留言处写下问题的答案。

Why do some weeks just fly by but sometimes minutes can seem like hours? And why do we perceive time differently in different circumstances? Neil and Alice discuss how our perception of time is linked to the speed our brains create memories.

This week's question

Roughly how much more quickly a fly's eye can react than a human eye? Is it …

a) twice as quickly?

b) four times as quickly?

c) ten times as quickly?

You'll hear the answer at the end of the programme.

Transcript

Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript.

Alice

Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice…

Neil

And I'm Neil. Did you have a good weekend, Alice?

Alice

Yes, but it flew by– which means it went quickly – and here we are again, back at work!

Neil

Hm. I know what you mean. Though I must say, time really draggedfor me – and that means it went slowly. I was on a train, which broke down.

Alice

Oh dear!

Neil

And it felt like it took forever to arrive – though actually it was only delayed only by one hour.

Alice

Well, today we're talking about our perceptionof – or the way we see – time. It's true that when we're busy doing lots of things, time flies by.

Neil

And when we're bored or have nothing to do, it drags. And I didn't have anything to do on the train. Do you think time flows at the same rate for everyone – even animals? My cat doesn't get bored doing nothing all day. I wonder if time drags for her sometimes?

Alice

Good question! Did you know, Neil, that, according to a new study, smaller animals perceive time as if it is passing in slow motion?

Neil

That sounds weird. Do you think they hear us like this: t…a…l…k…i…n…g s…l…o…w…l…y…?

Alice

Don't be silly, Neil! What I meant was that small animals such as insects and small birds can observe more detail in a certain period of time – for example, a second – than larger animals.

Neil

And how does this help them, exactly? It sounds like the day would really drag if every second got stretched out like that!

Alice

It helps them by giving them time to escape larger predators. Now, I have a question for you, Neil. Can you tell me roughly how much more quickly a fly's eye can react than a human eye? Is it …

a) twice as quickly?

b) four times as quickly?

Or c) ten times as quickly?

Neil

Well, I'll go for c) ten times. Flies are pretty nippy– and that's another word for quick.

Alice

Yes. Well, we'll find out later on if you got the answer right or not. Now, small animals can typically process more visual information than we can. But in a dangerous situation our brains can work in overdrive to process information more quickly. And overdrivemeans a state of extreme activity. Let's listen to Raza Rumi, a writer and broadcaster in Pakistan, talking about the unusual way his brain worked when gunmen opened fire on him in his car.

INSERT

Raza Rumi, writer and broadcaster, Pakistan

It lasted for a few minutes – but to me that particular incident feels like it was for hours. I think my brain was working in a very strange way. Parallel and multiple thoughts and streams of consciousness were sort of running along: 'I have to save my head because if I get a bullet in my brain I'm dead.' And at the same time, 'Was it all worth it?' And, 'Alas, what a short life it was, it was lovely.' I was petrified that I was going to die.

Neil

Raza Rumi there. So, he was petrifiedby the attack – which means extremely frightened. As a result, his brain started working in a strange way. He was thinking and feeling lots of different things at the same time.

Alice

That's right – he remembers thinking practical thoughts like, 'I have to save my head'.

Neil

But in parallel– or at the same time – he also remembers having philosophical thoughts, such as: What a short life it was, it was lovely.

Alice

Have you ever been in a dangerous situation where your brain went into overdrive, Neil?

Neil

Yes, I was ten years old and I fell backwards out of a big tree in our garden.

Alice

Oh no!

Neil

Yeah. I have a vivid memory of the sun flashing above me, and the clouds moving across the sky, and the leaves rustling in the tree above me – my mum was screaming through the kitchen window as she saw me fall. I experienced so much in the space of just a few seconds, just like Raza Rumi describes.

Alice

Yes. A vividmemory, by the way, is clear and detailed. Oh, poor Neil! Did you hurt yourself?

Neil

Some big bruises – but no broken bones.

Alice

Glad to hear it. Now, it's a strange trick of memory that in a scary situation your brain starts to record everything in great detail. And the more memory you have of an event, the longer you believe it took. This idea explains why children often feel that time is passing slowly – because their experiences are new, and they are creating lots of new memories.

Neil

Whereas boring grown-ups like us are following routines that don't require new memories because they're so familiar. But let's listen to Claudia Hammond, author of Time Warped, talking about how we can stretch time and make our days feel longer – in a good way!

INSERT

Claudia Hammond, author of Time Warped

If you can spend your weekend filling it with loads of new different activities, it'll go fast, at the time, because you're having fun. But when you look back, say, on Sunday night, and you've got to go to work next day, it will feel as if your weekend was long, because you filled it with new memories.

Alice

We should do that, this weekend, Neil. What do you think?

Neil

Definitely. I'm going to buzz around like a fly, creating loads of new memories.

Alice

Now, are you ready for the answer to today's quiz question? I asked: Roughly how much more quickly a fly's eye can react than a human eye? Is it … a) twice as quickly, b) four times as quickly or c) ten times as quickly?

Neil

And I said c) ten times as quickly.

Alice

The correct answer is b) four times as quickly. Flies have eyes that send updates to the brain at much higher frequencies than our eyes because they can process the information more quickly. This speed illustrates the impressive capabilities of even the smallest animal brains.

Neil

Well, before we buzz off, perhaps we should hear the words we learned today. They are:

flew by

dragged

perception

nippy

overdrive

petrified

in parallel

Alice

Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English. Remember to join us again soon!

Both

Bye!

Vocabulary

flew by

went quickly

dragged

went slowly

perception

the way we seeing something forever

nippy

quick

overdrive

a state of extreme activity

petrified

extremely frightened

in parallel

at the same time

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