首页
登录
职称英语
Passage Three (1) Dating is a treacherous business. There may be plenty
Passage Three (1) Dating is a treacherous business. There may be plenty
游客
2024-11-03
7
管理
问题
Passage Three
(1) Dating is a treacherous business. There may be plenty of fish in the sea, yet many are unhygienic, self-absorbed, disconcertingly attached to ex-fish, or fans of Donald Trump. Digital dating sites, including a growing
array of matchmaking apps, are meant to help. Their design owes more to hard-nosed economics than it does to the mysteries of the heart.
(2) In a sense, searching for a mate is not so different from hunting for a job. Jobs, like prospective partners, have their strengths and weaknesses, which makes finding the right one a matter of complicated tradeoffs. Such exchanges are different from other transactions, in that both parties must be enthusiastic about the match for it to happen. A supermarket, in contrast, does not particularly care whose wallet it is draining, nor does the power company agonise about whether a customer is worthy of its watts.
(3) Alvin Roth, who won a Nobel prize in economics for his work on market design, made a career of studying such "matching markets" , where supply and demand are not balanced by price. Instead, people transact based on information. An apple-seller can nudge down his prices until the whole cart is sold. Yet if Apple were looking to hire two workers, it would not set a salary so puny that only two people applied. The quality of new hires often matters at least as much as their salaries.
(4) Mr. Roth, who won the prize jointly with Lloyd Shapley in 2012, found that the structure of matching markets made a significant difference in determining who wound up with whom. Systems designed to elicit people’s true preferences generated better matches between hospitals and doctors, for example. But the entire medical profession has an interest in improving matches, and so can set up a national clearing house (信息搜集 所) to do just that. The lovelorn (失恋的) must instead rely on an array of digital matchmakers.
(5) Good matches depend on good information. Even without digital help, people usually have some inkling of how much they have in common. Cosmopolitan strivers move to New York, say, rather than sleepier cities, in part because they will meet other ambitious types with similar interests. Within New York, the places people choose to spend their time—whether Yankee Stadium or a yoga studio—determine which sorts of people they come into contact with. Because it is expensive to live in New York, and to spend time sweating in a yoga studio or swearing in the stands, people in such settings can be reasonably confident those around them are in some sense like-minded.
(6) But one critical bit of information is missing: whether there is mutual interest. The act of asking someone out is fraught. In the non-digital world, approaching a potential partner brings the risk of awkwardness or humiliation. Digital dating reduces this cost dramatically. Apps like Tinder and Happn, for example, reveal that a user likes another only when the feeling is mutual.
(7) The best matching markets are those that are "thick" , with lots of participants. The more people there are seeking digital dates, the greater the chance of finding a good match. Odds improve that another person in the crowd also enjoys Wagner, Thai food, or discussions about the economics of matching markets.
(8) The wealth of information many dating sites request may help to home in on the perfect match, but if the effort involved is enough to deter potential mates from joining in the first place, then it does more harm than good. When Tinder first launched, largely to facilitate casual sex, users assessed one another based only on looks, age and gender. Simplicity worked wonders; there are 26m matches made between Tinder users each day.
(9) The advantages of thick markets are lost, however, if they become too "congested", with users overwhelmed by the number of participants and unable to locate a good match among them. One response is to specialise. JSwipe, for instance, caters to Jewish singles while Bumble, an app where women must initiate contact, is meant to attract feminists.
(10) But the most popular apps seek to help their users filter possible mates using clever technology. Tinder, for example, only provides users with profiles of fellow Tinderites who are nearby, to make it that much easier to meet in person. It has also introduced a "super like" feature, which can be deployed only once a day, to allow smitten users to signal heightened interest in someone. In addition, last year it started allowing people to list their jobs and education, to help users to sort through the crowds. Users get the benefits both of a big pool of potential partners and various tools to winnow them. Sex and the city
(11) The emergence of matching apps, for those seeking love or theatre tickets or a lift, has certainly made once-onerous tasks more convenient. They may also contribute to more profound economic change. Dating apps could strengthen the trend toward " assortative mating (选型交配)" , whereby people choose to couple with those of similar income and skills. By one estimate, the trend accounts for about 18% of the rise in income inequality in America between 1960 and 2005. A recent study of online dating in South Korea found that it boosted sorting among couples by education.
(12) Better matching may also mean bigger cities. Metropolitan goliaths have long been melting-pots, within which those early on in their adult lives link up with jobs, friends and mates. Matching apps, romantic or not, make it easier to navigate the urban sprawl and sample all it has to offer. That, in turn, should make the biggest cities relatively more attractive to young people.
(13) Apps cannot yet make break-ups less painful. And love remains mysterious enough that even the most refined algorithms (算法) cannot predict mutual attraction with confidence. But they clearly help, judging by their legions of users. After all, it is better to have super-liked and lost than never to have super-liked at all. [br] According to the last paragraph, matching apps contribute to________.
选项
A、getting over the break-ups
B、keeping the mystery of love
C、foretelling the mutual attraction confidently
D、finding the true love
答案
D
解析
推断题。作者在文章最后一段第三句提到通过配对应用软件的众多用户可以判断,它们显然有用,然后在最后一句指出有过至爱却失去,总是要好过从未有过至爱,由此可以推断,配对应用软件的有用之处在于能够帮助用户找到至爱,故[D]为答案。该段第一句提到配对应用软件并不能减少分手的痛苦,[A]“走出分手的痛苦”与原文表述相反,故排除;第二句虽然提到爱情依旧神秘,但并未指出是配对应用软件保持了爱情的神秘性,故排除[B];第二句还提到即使是最优化的算法也不可能信心十足地预测出是否相互吸引,[C]信心十足地预测相互吸引”与原文表述不符,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3830067.html
相关试题推荐
PASSAGEFOUR[br]Whatdidthe"Polishsoil"inPara.4indicate?Chopinwaspatr
PASSAGETHREE[br]WhatmadePinterbecomeadramatist?Hisyouthfulencountersw
PASSAGETWO[br]Whatisthetallestgirl’sroleduringonedance?Thepursuerof
PASSAGEONE[br]WhyisSt.Petersburgcalleda"floatingcity"?Becauseitisne
PASSAGEONE[br]WhatwasSt.Petersburgcalledin1935?Leningrad.题目问的是圣彼得堡在1935
PASSAGEFOUR[br]WhatcanthesuccessofGooglebeascribedtoaccordingtothe
PASSAGETWO[br]WheredidtheHIVepidemicoriginatefromaccordingtoHahn?In
PASSAGEONE[br]Whatcanreducethecitizens’emotionalresponseaftertheterr
PASSAGETHEREE[br]Apartfromtheusefulcoincidence,whatfactorsdidthestud
PASSAGETHEREE[br]What’stheresultoftheresearchofYaleandtheUniversity
随机试题
Thedeclineinmoralstandards—whichhaslongconcernedsocialanalysts—has
A.疫苗效果指数 B.抗体阳转率 C.建卡率 D.四苗覆盖率 E.接种率
A.经济效益 B.治疗技术 C.医疗设备 D.医德医风 E.规章制度提高
为非均相液体制剂,毒性药物或小剂量药物不宜采用A.高分子溶液 B.溶液剂 C
以下哪项不属于站用交流电源系统精益化评价细则中技术档案的评判小项?()竣工图
李老师认真学习《幼儿园教师专业标准(试行)》,并制定了自己的专业发展规划。李老师
王新已经到了上学的年龄,但因为家里生活困难,没有钱送他去上学。每当看到同龄的孩子
信用卡本质上是商业银行提供的一种()。A.担保贷款 B.抵押贷款 C.保证
(2016年真题)下列职业生涯类型中,具有明显的冒险精神特征的是()。A.
比较适用于荷载较大、管线较多的商店和仓库等的楼板是( )。A.板式楼板 B.无
最新回复
(
0
)