时间:2018-12-19 作者:英语课 分类:Entertainment


英语课

  Jackie:  Hello, I'm Jackie Dalton. Welcome to Entertainment, which this week


  has a sports theme. We're going to be finding out about how noise from


  spectators 1 at sports events affects players or competitors taking part in a


  sport.


  Sandy Wilson


  It's been well known for many years that noise has a major effect on performance.


  Jackie:  Sports psychologist Dr Sandy Wilson says noise affects the performance


  of sportsmen and women. It 'affects their performance' means it


  influences how well they do or don't do when they're taking part in a


  sport – their performance. Listen to Sandy again and try to answer this


  question: how does noise affect our bodies?


  Sandy Wilson


  It's been well known for many years that noise has a major effect on performance. Noise


  causes an increase in people's arousal level, so that when people do hear noise, their


  heart rate increases, they breathe more quickly, they sweat a bit more. And all these


  kinds of things have an effect on performance.


  Jackie:  Sandy says noise affects arousal levels. If your body becomes more


  aroused, it is ready for action – as Sandy said, your heart might beat


  faster to get the blood around your body faster and you might breathe


  more quickly to get more oxygen in. This means your body is more


  prepared for the physical challenge of sport. So the sound of a noisy,


  cheering crowd can give sportspeople the extra energy to do well. But


  what about the noise spectators make when they're angry with their team


  because they aren't performing well?


  Angry spectators sometimes boo their team. To 'boo' someone is to make


  a noise to show you don't like their performance. How does this affect


  players? Listen to Sandy to find out.


  Sandy Wilson


  I think it makes them distracted 2 and self-conscious and ultimately 3 will have a negative


  effect on them, so I think it's counterproductive to boo your own team.


  Jackie:  Did you get the answer? Sandy says it's counterproductive to boo your


  own team. 'Counterproductive' – it achieves the opposite effect to what


  you want. It's counterproductive because players get 'distracted', which


  means they can't focus on what they're doing and 'self-conscious', which


  means worried about what people think of them. All this means they'll


  find it more difficult to perform well. Listen again.


  Sandy Wilson


  I think it makes them distracted and self-conscious and ultimately will have a negative


  effect on them, so I think it's counterproductive to boo your own team.


  bbclearningenglish.com


  Jackie:  Sandy says it's not just the players who are affected 4 by the noise crowds


  make. As you listen to this next clip 5, you'll hear the word 'handball'


  which is an expression used when a footballer has touched the football


  with his or her hand when they weren't meant to. So, let's listen to Sandy


  again. Now try to answer this question: apart from the players, who else


  might be affected by crowd noise?


  Sandy Wilson


  I think the noise that comes from the crowd can have a major effect on the referee 6. It's


  not just the players who are affected, but the referees 7 are affected. If you're a referee and


  you suddenly hear 40, 000 people shout 'handball!' then it might not be a question of


  being intimidated 8 by the crowd…it might be that that information can help you make a


  decision on what's been happening.


  Jackie:  Did you get the answer? Sandy says crowds can also influence referees –


  the people who make sure the rules of sport are being followed during a


  game.


  bbclearningenglish.com


  Some sports are noisier than others. Gary Sussman is an announcer at


  New Jersey's basketball stadium. His job is to build up some excitement


  among the players and the fans – 'the fans' - people who have come to


  support and encourage a particular team. He says basketball is the sport


  where players are most affected by the noise around them. Why is this?


  Listen to find out.


  Gary Sussman


  When you look at all the American sports, whether it be basketball, baseball, football,


  hockey… probably basketball - the crowd, the music - has the most effect because the


  players are closest to the fans and it just seems that they just get that extra bit of pace,


  that extra speed, just that extra motivation from the crowd noise and that's why that


  home advantage is so big in basketball.


  Jackie:  Gary says basketball players are really affected by the noise because they


  are so close to the fans. He says the noise gives players an extra bit of


  pace – 'pace', which means speed. He says they get more motivation –


  they feel more encouraged to do well. Another expression you might


  have heard is 'home advantage'. 'Home advantage' – let's break that down.


  To play a match 'at home' means to play in your own sports field or


  stadium, instead of at your opponent's. When we say a team has 'home


  advantage', we mean their chances of doing well are improved because


  they are playing in their own town.  Let's play that clip again and listen


  out for those words: pace, motivation, home advantage.


  Gary Sussman


  When you look at all the American sports, whether it be basketball, baseball, football,


  hockey… probably basketball - the crowd, the music - has the most effect because the


  players are closest to the fans and it just seems that they just get that extra bit of pace,


  that extra speed, just that extra motivation from the crowd noise and that's why that


  home advantage is so big in basketball.


  Jackie:  So if you're a fan of a particular sports team, make sure you go and


  encourage your team the next time they play – it seems your voice can


  make a difference!



1 spectators
n.观众,旁观者( spectator的名词复数 )
  • The spectators were wilting visibly in the hot sun. 看得出观众在炎热的阳光下快支撑不住了。
  • The policemen asked the spectators to stand well back. 警察要求旁观者靠后站。 来自《简明英汉词典》
2 distracted
a.注意力分散的,思想不集中的
  • When working, one should concentrate and not allow oneself to be distracted. 工作时要集中精力,不要分心。
  • Noise outside distracted her mind from her studies. 门外的噪音使她心神不宁,无法集中注意力学习。
3 ultimately
adv.最后地,最终地,首要地,基本地
  • It was a demeaning and ultimately frustrating experience.那是一次有失颜面并且令人沮丧至极的经历。
  • Vitamin C deficiency can ultimately lead to scurvy.缺乏维生素C最终能道致坏血病。
4 affected
adj.不自然的,假装的
  • She showed an affected interest in our subject.她假装对我们的课题感到兴趣。
  • His manners are affected.他的态度不自然。
5 clip
n.夹子,别针,弹夹,片断;vt.夹住,修剪
  • May I clip out the report on my performance?我能把报道我的文章剪下来吗?
  • She fastened the papers together with a paper clip.她用曲别针把文件别在一起。
6 referee
n.裁判员.仲裁人,代表人,鉴定人
  • The team was left raging at the referee's decision.队员们对裁判员的裁决感到非常气愤。
  • The referee blew a whistle at the end of the game.裁判在比赛结束时吹响了哨子。
7 referees
n.裁判员( referee的名词复数 );证明人;公断人;(专业性强的文章的)审阅人
  • The fiery player has had numerous run-ins with referees. 这位脾气暴躁的队员曾和裁判员发生过无数次争吵。
  • If you want to appeal, the Court of Referees will decide. 如果你要上诉,可以由仲裁法庭去判决。 来自辞典例句
8 intimidated
v.恐吓;威胁adj.害怕的;受到威胁的
  • We try to make sure children don't feel intimidated on their first day at school. 我们努力确保孩子们在上学的第一天不胆怯。
  • The thief intimidated the boy into not telling the police. 这个贼恫吓那男孩使他不敢向警察报告。 来自《简明英汉词典》
学英语单词
administration communication distribution center
aerial infrared scanner
average random access time
battered wife
be incapacitated from
binary method
blackrock
bursic acid
burstyll
charge air cooler
charles post
chnidosis
Christian holy day
Chuna-Tundra
coefficients of elasticity
coin wanking
comitative cases
dehydroiodination
distance tube
edge planer machine
eleclroacoustical
electrified kilometrage
element of surprise
exercise authority over
expense statement
family Phocidae
figure key
fleece-o
four-courses
fried pork kidney
full product introduction
gastrobrosis
generalized Maxwell model
gigantine
glandular stomach
Gummistein
heat-transfer machine
heteroglossia
hydraulic shifter unit
hydro-cyclone
hymenostomum exsertum broth
ibam
infinite amount of vaporization
international scale
intrapleural pneumolysis
Inza
jafar umar thalibs
kionochaeta ramifera
Kuhnian
letter column
loonier
make a fire
medicinal herbs
mellinson
muires
natural correspondence
nemotidirus leporis
neutron packet
non-segmented processor
null string problem
Oksa
P. S. P.
Phillyroside
pitch-workers' cancer
plane of uniform distortion
polarized screen
polyvinyl chloride fiber
preemptive action
production surface
public telephone station
radio beacons
Ramlila
re-loaded
sanitation method
sarking felt
sheeley
shot drilling
sieglinde
simply isomorphic group
slip hernia
spectrum-envelop of voice
SPEMHA
sproutin'
Statute Theory
subthalamic fasciculus
telphered
to a crumb
trefle compound
trimina
turn on method
twin exhaust pipes
unquieter
verger
water pollination
what are you on
whr,whr.,Whr, Whr., w-hr, W-hr
Wynnburg
xanthating churn
xiphophyllus
yurko
zigzag structure
zollinger-ellison syndromes