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Reading Passage 1 — Dolls Through the Ages
Questions 1–6: Note Completion
Complete the notes below. Choose ONE WORD ONLY for each answer.
- 1
bodies were made of 1 _________
- 2
2 _________ was used for the hair
- 3
dolls were given to 3 _________ by older girls
- 4
realistic dolls had separate clothes and 4 _________ that could be put in different positions
- 5
dolls made of 5 _________
- 6
moulds made of 6 _________
Questions 7–13: True/False/Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the text? Write TRUE if it agrees; FALSE if it contradicts; NOT GIVEN if there's no info.
- 7
Bisque dolls appear less realistic than dolls made of china.
- 8
French dolls tended to cost more than German bisque dolls.
- 9
The first rag dolls were made in the 1850s.
- 10
Only dolls made of cotton or linen are classified as cloth dolls.
- 11
Dolls made of celluloid tended to lose their colour.
- 12
Composition dolls lasted longer than the plastic dolls that were made in the 1940s.
- 13
Doll collectors prefer a doll to be dressed in its original clothing.
Reading Passage 2 — Malaria Combat in Italy
Questions 14–18: Summary Completion
Complete the summary below using NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage.
- 14
Before the link between malaria and 14 ________ was established
- 15
one of which points to 15 ________, the unclean air
- 16
rural people in malaria infested places had extremely short 16 ________
- 17
thus giving rise to the idea that the disease was 17 ________
- 18
People believed in these theories until mosquito was found to be the 18 ________ in the 1880s.
Questions 19–21: True/False/Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage? TRUE if the statement agrees with the information; FALSE if the statement contradicts the information; NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this.
- 19
The volunteers of the Italian experiments that provided assuring evidence were from all over Italy.
- 20
It's possible to come out of malarial zones alive.
- 21
The government successfully managed to give all people quinine medication.
Questions 22–26: Paragraph Matching
Reading passage has six paragraphs, A-F. Which paragraph contains the following information? Write the correct letter, A-F.
- 22
A breakthrough in the theory of the cause of malaria
- A. Paragraph A
- B. Paragraph B
- C. Paragraph C
- D. Paragraph D
- E. Paragraph E
- F. Paragraph F
- 23
A story for today's readers
- A. Paragraph A
- B. Paragraph B
- C. Paragraph C
- D. Paragraph D
- E. Paragraph E
- F. Paragraph F
- 24
A description of an expert who didn't do anything to restrict the spread of disease
- A. Paragraph A
- B. Paragraph B
- C. Paragraph C
- D. Paragraph D
- E. Paragraph E
- F. Paragraph F
- 25
A setback in the battle against malaria due to government policies
- A. Paragraph A
- B. Paragraph B
- C. Paragraph C
- D. Paragraph D
- E. Paragraph E
- F. Paragraph F
- 26
A description of how malaria affects the human body
- A. Paragraph A
- B. Paragraph B
- C. Paragraph C
- D. Paragraph D
- E. Paragraph E
- F. Paragraph F
Reading Passage 3 — Science and Filmmaking
Questions 27–31: True/False/Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 3? 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.
- 27
The Oscar awarded in 2004 was the first one ever given for an achievement in CGI.
- 28
CGI is most effective for altering an actor's appearance in wide shots rather than close-ups.
- 29
Marschner's team was the first group to identify that human skin is translucent.
- 30
The mathematical principles behind subsurface scattering were originally developed for filmmaking.
- 31
All major visual effects companies started using the new subsurface scattering technique before the research was officially published.
Questions 32–36: Summary Completion
Complete the summary below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
- 32
After winning the Oscar, the researchers wanted to improve how light 32 _________ is shown.
- 33
To do this, they employed 33 _________, a method from medical science.
- 34
This technique uses 34 _________ to create composite images from various angles
- 35
The data from this process was used to create a detailed 35 _________ of material structures.
- 36
The team then created 36 _________ to simulate the interaction of light with these tiny structures.
Questions 37–40: Short Answer
Answer the questions below. Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
- 37
What did early CGI systems incorrectly assume about human skin?
- 38
What scientific field provided the original mathematical concepts for simulating skin translucency?
- 39
What specific visual problem did the researchers address after winning the Oscar to achieve realism in close-ups?
- 40
Which two types of reflection did the researchers' later work focus on replicating?
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1. clay
The passage says early dolls were made from materials such as clay, fur, or wood, and specifically mentions 'hair made of clay' and 'flat pieces of wood, painted with various designs,' so the bodies were made of clay.
2. clay
It is stated that 'hair made of clay' was found on dolls in Egyptian graves, so clay was used for the hair.
3. goddesses
The passage says, 'Girls from ancient Greece and Rome offered their wooden dolls to goddesses after they were too "grown-up" to play with dolls.'
4. limbs
The passage explains that the goal was to make dolls lifelike, leading to 'the creation of dolls with movable limbs and removable garments,' so the answer is limbs.
5. wax
It says, 'Some of the more unique dolls were made with ivory or wax,' and later describes the popularity of wax dolls.
6. plaster
Wax dollmakers 'would model a doll's head in wax or clay, and then cover it with plaster to create a mould,' so moulds were made of plaster.
7. FALSE
This is FALSE because the passage says bisque 'looked more like skin than china did,' meaning bisque dolls appear more realistic, not less.
8. TRUE
The passage says 'German bisque dolls became quite popular because they were not as expensive' as French dolls, so French dolls cost more.
9. FALSE
This is FALSE because 'For many centuries, rag dolls were made by mothers for their children,' meaning they existed long before the 1850s.
10. TRUE
The passage says, ''Cloth doll' refers to a subset of rag dolls made of linen or cotton,' so only dolls made of these materials are classified as cloth dolls.
11. TRUE
It says celluloid 'fell out of favour because of its extreme flammability and propensity to fade in bright light,' meaning they tended to lose their colour.
12. FALSE
This is FALSE because hard plastic dolls made in the 1940s 'were much more durable' than composition dolls, so composition dolls did not last longer.
13. NOT GIVEN
NOT GIVEN because the passage does not mention whether collectors prefer dolls in their original clothing.
14. insects / mosquitoes
The passage says 'most experts believed that the disease was produced by "miasma" or "poisoning of the air"' before the link to mosquitoes (insects) was established.
15. "miasma"
It says, 'most experts believed that the disease was produced by "miasma" or "poisoning of the air"', so the answer is miasma.
16. life expectancy
The passage says, 'In malarial zones the life expectancy of land workers was a terrifying 22.5 years,' so rural people had extremely short life expectancy.
17. hereditary
It says, 'Epidemics were blamed on southern Italians, given the widespread belief that malaria was hereditary,' so the idea was that the disease was hereditary.
18. culprit / real culprit
The passage says, 'such theories began to collapse as the dreaded mosquito was identified as the real culprit' in the 1880s.
19. NOT GIVEN
NOT GIVEN because the passage does not say where the volunteers were from.
20. TRUE
TRUE because it says, 'Those who escaped death were weakened or suffered from splenomegaly,' showing survival was possible.
21. FALSE
FALSE because it says, 'peasants were often suspicious of medicine being forced upon them. Doctors were sometimes met with hostility and refusal,' so not everyone received quinine.
22. B
Paragraph B describes the breakthrough: 'Grassi was able to make the direct link between the insects (all females of a certain kind) and the disease.'
23. F
Paragraph F says, 'Snowden's book also has contemporary relevance. This is a disease that affects every level of the societies where it is rampant. It also provides us with "a message of hope for a world struggling with the great present-day medical emergency".'
24. E
Paragraph E describes how 'Alberto Missiroli had a role to play in the disaster: he did not distribute quinine, despite being well aware of the epidemic to come.'
25. D
Paragraph D says, 'War, from 1915-18, delayed the campaign. Funds were diverted to the battlefields and the fight against malaria became a military issue,' showing a setback due to government policies.
26. A
Paragraph A describes the effects: 'Those who escaped death were weakened or suffered from splenomegaly - a "painful enlargement of the spleen" and "a lifeless stare".'
27. NOT GIVEN
NOT GIVEN because the passage does not say if this was the first Oscar ever given for CGI.
28. TRUE
TRUE because it says, 'this effect only works well if the modified actors are not shown in extreme close-up shots,' meaning CGI is more effective in wide shots.
29. NOT GIVEN
NOT GIVEN because the passage does not say Marschner's team was the first to identify skin is translucent.
30. FALSE
FALSE because it says subsurface scattering is 'based on mathematical concepts that date back decades to their use in astrophysics,' not filmmaking.
31. FALSE
FALSE because it says 'within two years of their research being published, every major visual effects company had adopted it,' so it was after publication.
32. reflection
The passage says, 'the researchers remained determined to perfect their work, believing that the fine details of light reflection still were not reproduced convincingly.'
33. computerized tomography
It says, 'Marschner's team used computerized tomography, a medical imaging technique most familiar for viewing internal organs.'
34. radiation
It says, 'Like traditional X-rays, it uses radiation, but instead of producing a single photographic exposure, it combines images taken from multiple angles in a computer.'
35. map
It says, 'This advanced imaging provided a highly detailed, three-dimensional map of the microstructure of various materials.'
36. algorithms
It says, 'the researchers could develop new algorithms that accurately simulate how light interacts with the complex geometry of skin pores and fabric weaves.'
37. fully opaque
Early CGI systems 'assumed skin was fully opaque,' which made characters look artificial.
38. astrophysics
It says, 'subsurface scattering... is based on mathematical concepts that date back decades to their use in astrophysics.'
39. light reflection
After winning the Oscar, the researchers focused on 'replicating the phenomenon of specular reflection, where light glints off individual fibers or skin oils, and diffuse reflection,' to achieve realism in close-ups.
40. specular and diff
Their later work focused on 'specular reflection, where light glints off individual fibers or skin oils, and diffuse reflection, where light is scattered evenly from a rough surface.'