You
should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.
Phi Phi Island Resort
The
“Phi Phi Island Resort” is located in Phi Phi Leh island in Thailand, between
the large island of Phuket and the west Strait of Malacca coast of the
mainland. Phi Phi consists of six small islands 46km south of Phuket. Fine
sandy beaches give way to soaring limestone cliffs to form spectacular scenery.
Add crystal clear water, a refreshing lack of roads, plus a laid-back
lifestyle, and it's easy to see why Phi Phi is one of southern Thailand's most
popular destinations.
The
islands are administratively part of Krabi province. Ko Phi Phi is the largest
island of the group, and is the most populated island of the group, although
the beaches of the second largest island, Ko Phi Phi Leh are visited by many
people as well. The rest of the islands in the group, including Bida Nok, Bida
Noi, and Bamboo Island are not much more than large limestone rocks jutting out
of the sea. The Islands are reachable by speedboats or Long-tail boats most
often from Krabi Town or from various piers in Phuket Province.
The
islands came to worldwide prominence when Ko Phi Phi was used as a location for
the 2000 British-American film The Beach. This attracted criticism, with claims
that the film company had damaged the island's environment, since the producers
bulldozed beach areas and planted palm trees to make it resemble description in
the book, an accusation the film's makers contest. An increase in tourism was
attributed to the film's release, which resulted in increases in waste on the
Islands, and more developments in and around the Phi Phi Don Village.
Unlike
its larger brother Ko Phi Phi, Phi Phi Leh is a virgin island - it is almost
untouched by human civilization. Surrounded by sheer limestone walls dotted
with caves and passages the island's shallow blue-green lagoons and coral
gardens are a snorkeler’s paradise. The island also has two magnificent
beaches, Loh Samah and Maya Bay.
The
climate on Phi Phi Leh island is influenced by tropical monsoon winds. There
are two seasons: the rainy season from May till December and the hot season
from January till April. Average temperature ranges between 17–37 degrees
Celsius. Average rainfall per year is about 2,231 millimetres, wettest in July
and driest in February.
The
“Phi Phi Island Resort” is an eco-friendly hotel that aims at providing
excellent service without hurting the local environment. This dreamy lodging in
Thailand is as environmentally friendly as it gets. The building itself is
built with natural materials, such as local stone and wood. Moreover, all
utilities (such as cutlery, hygiene items, towels, kitchen utensils) are made
of bio-degradable materials.
The
pool is created in the local stone quarry, so that the harmony of local
landscape was not infringed. Since the water in the pool is replete with
natural salts and minerals, there is no need in further disinfection with
chlorinated compounds and the pool is absolutely chemical-free.
The
hotel provides soaps, gels and creams, which are all natural and organic. Waste
is recycled to the garden via a bio-cycle septic system, and “Phi Phi Island
Resort” uses hydro-electricity from a Pelton wheel and solar power.
The
restaurant values locally sourced products. That’s why only locally grown
vegetables and fruits along with natural sea products are served. The resort
ensures that fishing and croppage don’t contravene the local equilibrium of the
island.
Diving
and snorkeling at Phi Phi Leh Island are excellent. Many dive companies offer
all-inclusive trips only in this location. And other little secluded islands
are accessible from “Phi Phi Island Resort” by long-tail boats. Visitors can
take advantage of the free bike rentals, free shuttle service in an electric
vehicle and even green spa, with all organic products.
On
the other hand, this beautiful resort combines the seclusion much sought after
in Thailand with refinement of a 4.5 star resort. Privacy is certain on 70
tranquil acres of swaying coconut palms, fragrant gardens, and a half-mile of
sparkling shore overlooking the crystal Andaman Sea. Spacious and secluded
bungalows conform comfortably to the natural surroundings, welcoming stunning
coastal vistas and cool sea breezes. Stylish furnishings, gracious hospitality
and a private 800 metres stretch of pristine white sand beach lapped by the
turquoise waters of the Andaman Sea create an idyllic setting for a green and
calm holiday.
Questions 1-8
Do the following statements
agree with the information in the IELTS reading text?
In boxes 1-8 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
1. Phi Phi is located
46km south of Phuket.
2. Ko Phi Phi is the
largest, though not the most populated island of the group.
3. Islands gained their
popularity after Ko Phi Phi was used for a famous film.
4. The increase in tourism
had a negative effect on the Ko Phi Phi island.
5. Unlike its larger
brother Phi Phi Leh, Ko Phi Phi is a virgin island.
6. There are two seasons on
the Phi Phi Leh island: rainy and hot.
7. July is the hottest
month on the Phi Phi Leh.
8. The “Phi Phi Island
Resort” is very environmentally friendly.
Questions 9-13
Complete the sentences
below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in
boxes 9-13 on your answer
sheet.
9. Due to the fact that the
pool is rich in natural salts and minerals, there is no need to use for
further disinfection.
10. The
"Phi Phi Island Resort" uses a bio-cycle to
recycle waste.
11. The restaurant
serves only natural products.
12. Visitors
can take free bike rentals, free shuttle service and even .
13. Phi Phi Island
Resort has a refinement of a 4.5 .
You
should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-25, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
Sponging dolphins
(A) In 1984, researchers spotted dolphins doing
something unusual in Shark Bay, Western Australia. When the animals got hungry,
they ripped a marine basket sponge from the sea floor and fitted it over their
beaks like a person would fit a glove over a hand. The scientists suspected
that as the dolphins foraged for fish, the sponges protected their beaks, or
rostra, from the rocks and broken chunks of coral that litter the sea floor,
making this behavior the first example of tool use in this species.
(B) The researchers surmised that a long time ago one ingenious Shark Bay dolphin figured out that by prodding the sediments with a sponge attached to her beak, she could stir up these swim bladder-less fish without being hurt. Eventually, such technique became popular among other dolphins. But why do dolphins go to all of this trouble when they could simply snag a fish from the open sea? The answer is that the bottom-dwelling fish are a lot more nutritious. Some species also don't have swim bladders, gas chambers that help other fish control their buoyancy as they travel up and down the water column. In the Bahamas, where dolphins are also known to forage for bottom-dwelling fish, dolphins hunt partly by echolocating these bladders, which give off a strong acoustic signal. That helps the cetaceans find prey even when it's buried in sea sand. But bottom-dwelling fish, such as barred sandperch, which are favored by some Shark Bay dolphins, don't have swim bladders and so are harder to find with echolocation. The sea floor is not nearly as soft here as it is in the Bahamas, so if dolphins want to probe for these fish, they risk injuring their rostra.
(C) Not every dolphin in Shark Bay hunts with sponges. "It's primarily done by females," says Janet Mann, a behavioral ecologist. She believes the female dolphins invented the method because of the "selective pressures they face while raising a calf as long as they do," about 4 to 5 years. "These clever dolphins have figured out a way to target fish that other dolphins cannot," she says, adding that even the local fishermen do not catch, or even know about, this particular species. Mann's previous research has shown that dolphin mothers pass the sponging method to their daughters and some of their sons, rare evidence of a cultural tradition in an animal other than humans. The team has documented three generations of sponging dolphins.
(D) The foraging technique came to light a few decades ago - very recently in evolutionary terms - when a local fisherman spotted what looked like a strange tumour on a dolphin’s nose. Researchers eventually worked out that the ‘tumour’ was a conically shaped sponge and it became apparent that the dolphins would spend considerable time searching for one the right shape to fit their nose. The sponge is used to scatter the sand gently on the sea floor and disturb buried fish. When a fish is spotted, the dolphin drops the sponge and gives chase. "It has been thought that behaviours which are exclusively learnt from one parent are not very stable. With our model we could now show that sponging can be a stable behaviour," said Dr Anna Kopps, a biologist at the University of New South Wales.
(E) By modelling the emergence of "sponger" dolphins in a computer simulation, the team of researchers could see different scenarios in which the skill could have spread among the dolphin population over the years. They then compared the results of these simulations with field data on the genetic relationship between the spongers, to estimate the role of mothers teaching their offspring in transmitting the skill. They found that if the likelihood of a sponger's offspring learning the ability was less than certain, the dolphins that did pick up the technique needed to gain a survival advantage from the skill, in order for the ability to pass on to the next generation. The model also allowed them to attempt to calculate the date that the behaviour was likely to have originated."The results suggested that sponging was innovated at least 120 to 180 years ago - it is only a best estimate," said Dr Kopps. Scientists discovered that although dolphins tried to teach the hunting technique to all their young, it was mainly female offspring that grasped the concept. Why male offspring rarely acquire the same skill remains unclear, though the team put forward one possible explanation: male bottlenose dolphins tend to form close bonds with other males, and such alliances aren't suited to seabed foraging, since it is a time-consuming, solitary activity.
(F) The US scientists say discovering a new tool is a direct sign of intelligence. “There’s a strong link between animals with larger brains and tool users. Bottlenose dolphins have a brain second in size only to humans.” said Janet Mann, a marine biologist who led the research. “Dolphins are already good at catching fish so they don’t need tools, but they’ve discovered this sponge makes their job easier. Working out how to use tools in a creative way like that is a hallmark of intelligence.” Mann admits we still do not understand dolphins well. “It’s hard to get inside their heads because their brains are constructed differently and it’s very hard to analyse their language, but they do seem very intelligent,” she said.
(G) Dolphins are also often seen engaging in playful behaviour and creating tools to use for entertainment. They have been observed to blow bubbles which they form into rings to play with. After creating the bubble ring, a dolphin will use its nose and body to maintain the shape of the bubble and keep it from floating to the surface. The study provides a "better understanding of the why and how of sponging" by the Shark Bay dolphins, says Louis Herman, a cognitive psychologist. The work "adds to previously documented" examples of "innovation by this highly intelligent species." Patterson's and Mann's results also "reinforce a pattern" often seen in other tool-using animals, says Simon Reader, a behavioral biologist. "Tool use appears to be almost a last option, taken when other options fail or are unavailable," he says, noting that woodpecker finches in the Galápagos Islands "turn to tool use only in arid areas," wielding cactus spines to extract grubs from tree branches. Using tools takes time and energy, Reader says, and animals tend to rely on them only when there's a guaranteed payoff, such as turning up a fatty fish that most other dolphins (and fishermen) know nothing about.
Questions 14-20
Reading
Passage 2 has seven paragraphs, A-G.
Which
paragraph contains the following information?
Write
the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 14-20 on your
answer sheet.
14. Hallmark of intelligence
15. Fisrt example of dolphins using tools
16. Tool for entertainment
17. The reason why dolphins go through trouble of getting fish from
the bottom of the ocean
18. The evidence of tradition in dolphins
19. The estimated time of sponging innovation
20. The observation of a local fisherman
Questions 21-25
Choose
the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write
the correct letter in boxes 21-25 on your answer sheet.
21. Dolphins use sponges for hunting fish because:
- they
like it.
- it
helps them get fish from the bottom of the ocean.
- it
makes hunting easier.
- it
helps them to get more fish during the hunt.
22. All the following statements about dolphins are true, EXCEPT:
- Females
discovered the method of hunting with sponges.
- The
sponging method is passed by female dolphins to their daughters.
- Male
dolphins never use the sponging technique.
- Three
generations of sponging dolphins have been documented.
23. Biologist Dr. Anna says that
- sponging
is very dangerous for dolphins.
- dolphins
do not inherit sponging method from their parents.
- she
has benn studying dolphins for a few decades now.
- sponging
can be a stable behaviour.
24. With the computer simulation that modeled sponging, researchers
- managed
to find out approximately when sponging was originated.
- were
able to predict the behaviour of dolphins.
- found
out the true reason of sponging.
- discovered
a new way treating dolphins
25. Accroding to Janet Mann
- bottlenose
dolphins have brain as big as humans have.
- we
can understand dolphins well now.
- dolphins
are very intellegent.
- all
of the above.
You
should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 26-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Toddlers Bond With Robot
(A) Will the robot revolution begin in nursery school?
Researchers introduced a state-of-the-art social robot into a classroom of 18-
to 24-month-olds for five months as a way of studying human-robot interactions.
The children not only came to accept the robot, but treated it as they would a
human buddy - hugging it and helping it - a new study says. "The results
imply that current robot technology is surprisingly close to achieving
autonomous bonding and socialization with human toddlers," said Fumihide
Tanaka, a researcher at the University of California, San Diego
(B) The development of robots that interact socially with people has been difficult to achieve, experts say, partly because such interactions are hard to study. "To my knowledge, this is the first long-term study of this sort," said Ronald Arkin, a roboticist at the Georgia Institute of Technology, who was not involved with the study. "It is groundbreaking and helps to forward human-robot interaction studies significantly," he said.
(C) The most successful robots so far have been storytellers, but they have only been able to hold human interest for a limited time. For the new study, researchers introduced a toddler-size humanoid robot into a classroom at a UCSD childhood education center. Initially the researchers wanted to use a 22-inch-tall model, but later they decided to use another robot of the QRIO series, the 23-inch-tall (58-centimeter-tall) machine was originally developed by Sony. Children of toddler age were chosen because they have no preconceived notions of robots, said Tanaka, the lead researcher, who also works for Sony. The researchers sent instructions about every two minutes to the robot to do things like giggle, dance, sit down, or walk in a certain direction. The 45 sessions were videotaped, and interactions between toddlers and the robot were later analyzed.
(D) The results showed that the quality of those interactions improved steadily over 27 sessions. The tots began to increasingly interact with the robot and treat it more like a peer than an object during the first 11 sessions. The level of social activity increased dramatically when researchers added a new behavior to QRIO's repertoire: If a child touched the humanoid on its head, it would make a giggling noise. The interactions deteriorated quickly over the next 15 sessions, when the robot was reprogrammed to behave in a more limited, predictable manner. Finally, the human-robot relations improved in the last three sessions, after the robot had been reprogrammed to display its full range of behaviors. "Initially the children treated the robot very differently than the way they treated each other," Tanaka said. "But by the end they treated the robot as a peer rather than a toy."
(E) Early in the study some children cried when QRIO fell. But a month into the study, the toddlers helped QRIO stand up by pushing its back or pulling its hands. “The most important aspect of interaction was touch”, Tanaka said. “At first the toddlers would touch the robot on its face, but later on they would touch only on its hands and arms, like they would with other humans”. Another robotlike toy named Robby, which resembled QRIO but did not move, was used as a control toy in the study. While hugging of QRIO increased, hugging of Robby decreased throughout the study. Furthermore, when QRIO laid down on the floor as its batteries ran down, a toddler would put a blanket over his silver-colored "friend" and say "night-night."
(F) "Our work suggests that touch integrated on the time-scale of a few minutes is a surprisingly effective index of social connectedness," Tanaka says. "Something akin to this index may be used by the human brain to evaluate its own sense of social well-being." He adds that social robots like QRIO could greatly enrich classrooms and assist teachers in early learning programs. Hiroshi Ishiguro - robotics expert at Osaka University in Japan - says, "I think this study has clearly reported the possibilities of small, almost autonomous humanoid robots for toddlers. Nowadays robots can perform a variety of functions that were thought to be incident to people only - in short time we’ll have electronic baby-sitters and peer-robots in every kindergarten," said Ishiguro, who was not involved with the study but has collaborated with its authors on other projects.
(G) Now this study has taken a new direction - the researchers are now developing autonomous robots for the toddler classroom. "I cannot avoid underlining how great potential it could have in educational settings assisting teachers and enriching the classroom environment," Tanaka said. However, some scientists don’t share his opinion.
(H) Arkin, the Georgia Tech roboticist, said he was not surprised by the affection showed by the toddlers toward the robot. "Humans have a tremendous propensity to bond with artifacts with any or all sort, whether it be a car, a doll, or a robot," he said. But he also cautioned that researchers don't yet understand the consequences of increased human-robot interaction. "Just studying how robots and humans work together can give us insight into whether this is a good thing or a bad thing for society," Akrin said. "What are the consequences of introducing a robot artifact into a cadre of children? How will that enhance, or potentially interfere with, their social development? It might make life easier for the teacher, but we really don't understand the long-term impact of having a robot as a childhood friend, do we?"
Questions 26-32
Reading
Passage 3 has eight paragraphs, A-H.
Which
paragraph contains the following information?
Write
the correct letter, A-H, in boxes 26-32 on your
answer sheet. You may use any letter more than once.
26. Changes in toddler-robot interactions quality.
27. Comparison of two different robots.
28. The fact that previous robots could maintain people’s interest
only for a short time.
29. The importance of touch.
30. The new direction of the study.
31. Technical parameters of the introduced robot.
32. The significance and novelty of the conducted study.
Questions 33-37
Connect
each of the statements below with the name of scientist who expressed it.
Answer A, B, or C to questions 33-37.
A
|
Fumihide Tanaka
|
B
|
Ronald Arkin
|
C
|
Hiroshi Ishiguro
|
33. Robots will perform duties of baby-sitters in the nearest
future.
34. By the end of the study children treated the robot as a
living creature rather than a toy.
35. The long-term impact of having a robot as a childhood friend
can be negative.
36. The conducted study is the first major study of this
sort.
37. Robots can be used in classrooms and assist teachers.
Questions 38-40
Choose
the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write
the correct letter in boxes 38-40 on your answer sheet.
- For the study, researchers
introduced a toddler-size humanoid robot that was
- 58-inch-tall
- 22-inch-tall
- 23-inch-tall
- 45-inch-tall
- The researchers sent
instructions to the robot to perform different actions EXCEPT
- laugh
- dance
- sit
down
- crawl
- The toddlers began to
increasingly interact with the robot during
- the
first 11 sessions
- the
next 15 sessions
- the
first 27 sessions
- the
last 15 sessions
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