- •В.С. Слухинська, і.Ф. Шилінська Навчальний посібник Англійська мова для професійного спілкування
- •I. Match words in the text with their definition
- •IV. Convert sentences from Active Voice into Passive Voice.
- •V. Answer the following questions:
- •I. Match words with their definition:
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: In the first generation, vacuum tubes were used as the internal computer components. – Student b: Yes, that is right.
- •III. Convert sentences from Active Voice into Passive Voice.
- •IV. Continue the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •V. Fill in the prepositions if necessary:
- •VI. Answer the following questions:
- •I. Match the following words from the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Using the touch screen, you can indicate your selection on a menu display by just touching the screen next to that menu item. – Student b: Yes, you are quite right.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Fill in the prepositions if necessary :
- •V. Answer the following questions.
- •I. Match words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Source data automation equipment captures data directly from its original form. – Student b: Yes, that is true.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using the words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Define what part of speech the words in bold type are. Translate them into Ukrainian.
- •V. Answer the following questions.
- •Computer Input: Speech/Voice Recognition
- •Ibm ViaVoice
- •I. Match words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: I’ve heard that ibm ViaVoice offers good accuracy, but is not as easy to use as NaturallySpeaking. – Student b: Yes, that is quite right.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Complete the raw.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •Central Processing Unit (cpu)
- •Digital Chips
- •I. Match words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •III. Complete the following sentences using the words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Fill in the prepositions if necessary.
- •V. Answer the following questions.
- •Computer Storage Fundamentals
- •I. Match words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: For electronic circuits the conducting (on) state represents the number zero, the nonconducting (off) state represents the number one. – Student b: Yes, that is true.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Read and translate the text. Replace the Ukrainian words into their English variants given after the text.
- •V. Answer the following questions.
- •I. Match words from the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Some secondary caches can be expanded, some cannot. – Student b: Yes, that is true.
- •III. Join the sentences with the proper variant in the right column.
- •IV. Answer the following questions.
- •I. Match words from the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •Student a: The semiconductor memory card is used as a recording medium. – Student b: Yes, it is true.
- •S. A: sd cards are built-in. – s. B: No, it is false. These cards are hot-swappable, allowing the user to easily insert and remove them.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Answer the following questions.
- •2. What enables the semiconductor memory card to be used as a recording medium?
- •3. What type of memory is flash memory?
- •4. What advantages do flash memory devices have comparing with other memory devices?
- •I. Match words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: 1. In most hard disk drives the platters cannot be removed. – Student b: Yes, That is true. For that reason they are called fixed disk drives.
- •2) S. A: a hard disk drive contains rigid, disk-shaped platters made of copper. – s. B: No, that is false. They are made of aluminium or glass.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Read the text.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •Resolution
- •I. Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Fill in the prepositions if necessary:
- •V. Put the verbs in brackets in the correct tense:
- •VI. Answer the questions.
- •Innumerate as many advantages/disadvantages of lcDs/crTs as you can. Use the model:
- •History of the Internet. E – mail
- •I. Match the words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: The invention of e-mail caused the Internet's tremendous growth. – Student b: Yes, that is true. Today it is a widely used Internet feature.
- •2) S. A: To have your e-mail mailbox you have to get permission from the Internet provider. – s. B: No, that is false! You don’t have to get it. All you have to do is to enroll yourself.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Open the brackets using the necessary Voice (Active or Passive).
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •I. Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: People want to automate human intelligence to understand it better. – Student b: Yes, that is true, but another reason is simply we want to have smarter programs.
- •2) S. A: Fuzzy logic systems can process data that are fully complete. – s. B: No, that is completely false, they process incomplete or ambiguous data, called fuzzy data.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Fill in the prepositions if necessary.
- •VI. Answer the questions.
- •Virtual Reality
- •I. Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Virtual reality is also called telepresence. – Student b: Yes, this is true.
- •2) S. A: The use of virtual reality is unlimited. – s. B: That is false. Its use is limited by the performance and cost of its technology.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Fill in the prepositions if necessary.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •I. Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: a personal digital assistant may be used to store and display addresses and telephone numbers, to-do lists, and other electronic information. – Student b: Yes, this is true.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Put the questions to the words in bold type.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •5. By what device is the touch-sensitive screen of a pda activated?
- •I. Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Modern portable electronic devices require the ability to operate with multi-media features. – Student b: Yes, this is true.
- •2) S. A: a digital video disk can store information in one format – dvd-rom. – s. B: No, this is false. It can store information in several formats.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. In the text first define the sentences with the verbs in Passive Voice, then with the verbs in Participle II.
- •V. Fill in the prepositions if necessary.
- •VI. Answer the questions.
- •Programming Languages
- •I.Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Translator programs called assemblers allow a computer to convert the instructions of such languages into machine instructions. – Student b: Yes, that is true.
- •2) S. B: Most high-level languages are machine oriented. – s. B: No, this is false. Most high-level languages are machine independent. Assembler is machine oriented.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Fill in the prepositions if necessary.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •Fourth-Generation Languages
- •I.Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: a natural language is a type of query language that allows the user to enter requests that resemble human speech. – Student b: Yes, this is really so.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Read and translate the text.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •I.Match the words in the text with their definitions:
- •II. Identify whether the following sentences are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: Multimedia systems are widely used in business for training employees, making sales presentations, and other business presentations. – Student b: Yes, this is true.
- •2) S. A: Interactive training software is a built-in computer’s feature. – s. B: No, that is false. It is distributed on cd-rom or may be shared over a network.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below:
- •IV. Answer the questions.
- •V. Read and translate the text.
- •List the advantages and disadvantages of multimedia in education.
- •I. Match words in the text with their definitions.
- •II. Identify whether the following statements are true or false. Use the model:
- •1) Student a: a computer is directed by a series of instructions called a computer program. – Student b: Yes, that is true.
- •2) Purchased programs often are referred to as system software packages. – s. B: No, that is false. These programs are referred to as application software packages.
- •III. Complete the following sentences using words and expressions given below.
- •IV. Read and the text. Define what parts of speech the words in bold type are. Translate them into Ukrainian.
- •V. Answer the questions.
- •English-Ukrainian Glossary
- •Content
VI. Answer the questions.
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What tasks is artificial intelligence concerned with?
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Why do people want to automate human intelligence?
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Is AI a field that overlaps with computer science or a strict subfield?
4. What sciences are different areas of AI closely related to?
5. What are philosophical debates on the issue of AI?
6. What positions resulting from the tests of Turing and Searle are there?
7. What disciplines is cognitive science based on?
8. What does it focus on?
9. What systems do applications in the cognitive science area of AI include?
Read the text, name it, divide the text into paragraphs.
Give the main idea of the text (2-3 sentences).
The human brain is made up of a web of billions of cells called neurons, and understanding its complexities is seen as one of the last frontiers in scientific research. It is the aim of AI researchers who prefer this bottom-up approach to construct electronic circuits that act as neurons do in the human brain. Although much of the working of the brain remains unknown, the complex network of neurons is what gives humans intelligent characteristics. By itself, a neuron is not intelligent, but when grouped together, neurons are able to pass electrical signals through networks. Research has shown that a signal received by a neuron travels through the dendrite region, and down the axon. Separating nerve cells is a gap called the synapse. In order for the signal to be transferred to the next neuron, the signal must be converted from electrical to chemical energy. The signal can then be received by the next neuron and processed. Warren McCulloch after completing medical school at Yale, along with Walter Pitts, a mathematician, proposed a hypothesis to explain the fundamentals of how neural networks made the brain work. Based on experiments with neurons, McCulloch and Pitts showed that neurons might be considered devices for processing binary numbers. An important back of mathematic logic, binary numbers (represented as 1's and 0's or true and false) were also the basis of the electronic computer. This link is the basis of computer-simulated neural networks, also know as Parallel computing.
Virtual Reality
Virtual reality (VR) is computer-simulated reality. Virtual reality is a fast-growing area of artificial intelligence that had its origin in efforts to build more natural, realistic, multisensory human/computer interfaces. So virtual reality relies on multisensory inputoutput devices such as a tracking headset with video goggles and stereo earphones, a data glove or jumpsuit with fiber-optic sensors that track your body movements, and a walker that monitors the movement of your feet. Then you can experience computer-simulated “virtual words” three-dimensionally through sight, sound and touch. Thus, virtual reality is also called telepresence. For example, you can enter a computer-generated world, look around and observe its contents, pick up and move objects and move around in it at will. Thus, virtual reality allows you to interact with computer-simulated objects, entities and environments as if they actually exist.
Current application of virtual reality are wide ranging and include computer-aided design (CAD), medical diagnostics and treatment, scientific experimentation in many physical and biological sciences, flight simulation for training pilots and astronauts, product demonstrations, employee training and entertainment, especially 3-D video arcade games. CAD is the most widely used industrial VR application. It enables architects and other designers to design and test electronic 3-D models of products and structures by entering the models themselves and examining, touching and manipulating sections and parts from all angels.
VR designers are creating everything from virtual weather patterns and virtual wind tunnels to virtual cities and virtual securities markets. For example, by converting stock market and other financial data into three-dimensional graphic form, securities analysts can use VR systems to more rapidly observe and identify trends and exceptions in financial performance. Also promising are applications in information technology itself. This includes the development of 3-D models of telecommunications networks and databases.
VR becomes telepresence when users that can be anywhere in the world use VR systems to work alone or together at a remote site. Typically, this involves using a VR system to enhance the sight and touch of a human who is remotely manipulating equipment to accomplish a task. Examples range from virtual surgery, where surgeon and patient may be on either side of the globe, to the remote use of equipment in hazardous environments such as chemical plants or nuclear reactors.
VR Limitations. The use of virtual reality seems limited only by the performance and cost of its technology. For example, some VR users develop cybersickness, such as eyestrain and motion sickness, from performance problems in the realism of VR systems. The cost of a virtual reality system is another limitation. A VR system consisting of a headset with goggles and headphones, a fiber–optic data glove, motion-sensing devices and a powerful engineering workstation with top-quality 3-D modelling software can exceed $ 50,000. If you want less cumbersome devices, more realistic displays and more natural sense of motion in your VR world, costs can escalate into several hundred thousand dollars. CAVEs (cave automatic virtual environments), virtual rooms that immerse you in a virtual reality experience, cost several million dollars to set up.
For example, the Market Risks Department of Morgan Stanly & Co. uses Discovery virtual reality software by Visible Decisions to model risks of financial investments in varying market conditions. Discovery displays three-dimensional results using powerful Silicon Graphics workstations.
Comments:
video goggle (захисні або темні) відеоокуляри
fiber optics оптоволоконний кабель//тонкий і гнучкий кабель
високої пропускної здатності для передавання світ-
лових сигналів
stock market рівень цін на фондовій біржі
to immerse заглиблювати, занурювати
3-D video arcade games тривимірні аркадні ігри//клас комп’ютерних ігор
зі сценарієм, який вимагає активних дій гравця
під час проходження керованим ним персонажем
численних рівнів
hazardous environment небезпечне середовище
to enhance посилювати