英語閱讀 學(xué)英語,練聽力,上聽力課堂! 注冊(cè) 登錄
> 輕松閱讀 > 雙語閱讀 >  內(nèi)容

科學(xué)揭示人為啥會(huì)暈車

所屬教程:雙語閱讀

瀏覽:

2016年09月16日

手機(jī)版
掃描二維碼方便學(xué)習(xí)和分享
人為啥會(huì)暈車?因?yàn)榇竽X以為我們中毒了

 

Traveling makes us feel sick because modern transport tricks the brain into thinking we have been poisoned, a neuroscientist has said.
一位神經(jīng)系統(tǒng)科學(xué)家表示,現(xiàn)代交通工具會(huì)誘導(dǎo)大腦認(rèn)為我們已經(jīng)中毒,所以旅行常常使我們感到不舒服。

Being in a car, train, boat or plane causes conflicting signals in the brain which trigger a reaction similar to that which occurs when someone is poisoned.
乘坐汽車、火車、船舶或飛機(jī)的體驗(yàn)會(huì)在大腦中形成相互矛盾的信號(hào),這會(huì)引發(fā)和人們中毒時(shí)相似的反應(yīng)。

Dr Dean Burnett, of Cardiff University, said the feeling of nausea is caused because the brain thinks the body needs to remove a toxin through vomiting.
卡迪夫大學(xué)的迪安•伯內(nèi)特博士稱,大腦認(rèn)為人體需要通過嘔吐排毒,于是便造成了這種惡心感。

But in fact, the 'poisoning' effect is caused by the mixed messages from the muscles – which tell the brain the body is motionless – and the ears, which sense movement.
但事實(shí)上,這種“中毒”效應(yīng)是由肌肉中的混合信息所引發(fā)的,肌肉向大腦傳達(dá)身體靜止的信息,而耳朵卻察覺到身體在運(yùn)動(dòng)。

Speaking on the US radio show Fresh Air, Dr Burnett said that the body had not yet evolved to cope with the sensation of being in vehicles, where the body is being moved without performing movements itself.
伯內(nèi)特博士在美國廣播電臺(tái)節(jié)目《新鮮空氣》中表示,在交通工具中人們的身體在被移動(dòng),而本身卻未執(zhí)行任何行動(dòng),人體還未進(jìn)化到能夠適應(yīng)這種感覺。

He said: 'When we're in a vehicle like a car or a train or a ship especially, you're not actually physically moving... Your muscles are saying 'we are stationary'.
他說:“當(dāng)我們乘坐尤其是汽車、火車或是輪船這樣的交通工具時(shí),你的身體事實(shí)上沒有在運(yùn)動(dòng),因此你的肌肉也認(rèn)為‘我們是靜止的’。”

'If you are sitting in a ship, you're looking at a static environment, so there's no information for the eyes to say 'we are moving'.
“如果你坐在船上,你是看著一個(gè)靜態(tài)的環(huán)境,因此并沒有傳遞給眼睛‘我們正在運(yùn)動(dòng)’的信息。

'But the fluids in your ears, they obey the laws of physics. And they are sort of rocking around and sloshing because you are actually moving.
“但是你耳朵里的液體遵循物理定律,你確實(shí)在移動(dòng),因此它們四處搖擺、晃動(dòng)。

'So what's happening there is the brain's getting mixed messages. It's getting signals from the muscles and the eyes saying "we are still" and signals from the balance sensors saying 'we're in motion'. Both of these cannot be correct. There's a sensory mismatch there.
“所以問題就是大腦得到了混合信息。肌肉和眼睛告訴它‘我們是靜止的’,而從平衡感知器官傳來的信號(hào)又說‘我們?cè)谶\(yùn)動(dòng)’。這兩者不可能同時(shí)正確,所以知覺就不相匹配。

'And in evolutionary terms, the only thing that can cause a sensory mismatch like that is a neurotoxin or poison. So the brain thinks, essentially, it's been being poisoned.
“從進(jìn)化角度來看,唯一能夠引起感知矛盾的就是神經(jīng)毒素或中毒,因此大腦判斷其根源在于中毒了。

'When it's been poisoned, the first thing it does is get rid of the poison, aka throwing up.'
“當(dāng)中毒的時(shí)候,首先要做的就是排毒,也就是嘔吐。”

He explained that reading in a car made the sensation of travel sickness worse, because the eyes were focused on a small, static space and gave the brain no information to explain that the body was moving.
他進(jìn)一步解釋,在車上閱讀會(huì)惡化暈車的癥狀,因?yàn)檠劬κ冀K盯著一塊小而靜止的空間,讓大腦無從解釋為什么感到身體正在移動(dòng)。

The feeling of sickness could be relieved by looking out of a car window because this showed the brain movement was taking place.
看車窗外卻能夠緩解暈車的感覺,因?yàn)檫@告訴大腦人體正在運(yùn)動(dòng)當(dāng)中。

'You can see the passage and movement itself, so that balances the system,' he said.
他說:“你可以親眼目睹過道以及移動(dòng)本身,這也就讓系統(tǒng)得到了平衡。”

'The brain's going: 'Oh, look, things moving - I must be moving' - and then sort of calms down the sickness response.'
“大腦這樣思考:‘噢,看,物體在運(yùn)動(dòng),我也一定在運(yùn)動(dòng)’——這也就在某種程度上緩解了暈車的反應(yīng)。”

Dr Burnett, who was discussing his new book 'Idiot Brain: what your head is really up to', said brain systems became more refined and efficient as people aged but that children were more susceptible to travel sickness because their brains were still developing.
伯內(nèi)特博士在新書《愚蠢的大腦:你的頭究竟怎么了》中說道,隨著人們歲數(shù)的增大,腦部系統(tǒng)變得越來越精煉和高效,而孩子們更容易暈車,因?yàn)樗麄兊拇竽X仍在發(fā)育當(dāng)中。

He said there was no clear reason why some people suffered from travel sickness more than others, calling it a 'quirk of development'.
他表示,現(xiàn)在還無法清楚地解釋為什么有些人比別人更容易暈車,他將其命名為“發(fā)育中的怪異現(xiàn)象”。

But he said there were several other aspects of modern life with which the brain had not yet evolved to cope.
但他同時(shí)聲稱,大腦進(jìn)化至今還未能適應(yīng)現(xiàn)代生活中的好多其他方面。

For example, jet-lag was the brain's response to being disorientated by being moved between time zones with different levels of daylight, he said.
他說,舉例來說,時(shí)差綜合癥是人體穿梭于不同時(shí)區(qū)不同白晝時(shí),大腦因感到迷亂而產(chǎn)生的反應(yīng)。

Vocabulary

slosh: 攪動(dòng),晃動(dòng)
aka: 又叫作,亦稱(also known as)
jet-lag: 時(shí)差綜合癥


 


用戶搜索

瘋狂英語 英語語法 新概念英語 走遍美國 四級(jí)聽力 英語音標(biāo) 英語入門 發(fā)音 美語 四級(jí) 新東方 七年級(jí) 賴世雄 zero是什么意思日照市科大名居英語學(xué)習(xí)交流群

網(wǎng)站推薦

英語翻譯英語應(yīng)急口語8000句聽歌學(xué)英語英語學(xué)習(xí)方法

  • 頻道推薦
  • |
  • 全站推薦
  • 推薦下載
  • 網(wǎng)站推薦