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英語 高校生

日本語に翻訳してくれる方いらっしゃいますか😭

F UXIT How many hours of sleep did you get last night? For years, scientists have tried to work out how long we should sleep to help our bodies and minds to function best. In 1951, two researchers at the University of Chicago made a breakthrough by identifying an important stage of sleep called REM sleep. 5 REM is an abbreviation for Rapid Eye Movement and the name comes from 由来する。 AFG the very fast movement of the eyes during sleep. In REM sleep, the brain is active but the body is asleep. When a person is having dreams they are often in REM sleep. During this time, the eyes might move quickly in reaction to something seen in a dream. Someone in REM 10 sleep may wake up suddenly to a noise and be able to remember the dream in detail. ju While REM sleep is known as the body's sleep, non-REM sleep is known as ryhmis the mind's sleep. During non-REM sleep, the brain relaxes while the body produces growth hormones so it can recover. About 80 percent of sleep is lat 15 non-REM sleep. If you sleep for seven to eight hours a night, only about one and a half hours are spent in REM sleep. In one night, a person will continue to repeat a cycle of both REM and non-REM sleep, which lasts about 90 NEXU prinsteil minutes. HO Many people will repeat about five cycles each night to help them function 4 people 20 best. However, other people may need to repeat (fewer or more cycles. Interestingly, while Leonardo Da Vinci only slept for about 90 minutes per おりりない day, Einstein needed ten hours of sleep. Still, both of them became famous 海 for their artistic and scientific achieveme achievements. Perhaps they were getting just the right amount of rest for their bodies and minds(aby) 116 for their artistic and scientific の 95. godinu b many more most bady brain nch

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英語 高校生

添削お願いします🙇‍♀️

下記の英文を読んで設問に答えなさい。*の付いている語句に関しては本文の後にまとめて注 があります。 Jason paced the corridor* outside the boardroom* before his presentation. He could heat his pulse (イ) his ears, and his mouth was dry. (1)The last time he felt like this. he told himself to relax. but it didn't work. So this time, he tried something different: "I feel excited." Suddenly, his symptoms* the racing pulse, the twisting stomach, the sweaty palms-started to energize him. The boardroom door opened. He performed brilliantly. This story might be fiction, butat its core lies a very real truth. (2)The science of emotion tells us that our bodies respond( similarly to many different emotions, including anger, excitement and anxiety, And recent research has, shown that if we verbally* put those symptoms into a different context-by saying "I feel excited" when feeling stressed, for example-we can trick ourselves into following suit*. The key to all this is the neurotransmitter*| and hormone norepinephrine*. When you're too stressed or scared, your norepinephrine levels surge* well(ロ)their sweet spot*;/when you tell yourself you're excited,they sometimes fall back. Of course, (3)this trick won't work (ハ) every emotion: it's a lot harder to reframe stress )(ニ) relaxation, because those two conditions have entirely different physical symptoms. Nonetheless, in the right context, stress can become a source of positive energy-not just a by-product* of anxiety. (出典)Ian Robertson, “How Stressing Out Can Help You Succeed", Time, 189 巻,4号,p.15, Jan. 23, 2017. (注) corridor:廊下 boardroom:重役会議室 symptom:症状 verbally: 言葉で neurotransmitter : 神経伝達物質 フリン(興奮を伝達する脳内ホルモンの一種で、ノルアドレナリンとも呼ぶ) surge: 急上昇する、 わき立つ sweet spot : 最適なレベル follow suit:それに従う hormone norepinephrine : ホルモン·ノルエピネ by-product:副産物 彼生が最後にこのように感じたとき、彼失はソラックスするように [設問1] [設問2] 【設問3) [設問4] 下線部(1)を和訳しなさい。 自分に言い開かセたが、 それはりまくいがながった。 下線部(2)を和訳しなさい。 下線部(3)this trickの事例を本文に即して具体的に日本語で説明しなさい。 文中の空欄(イ)~ (=) に入る最も適切な語をそれぞれ次の1から6の中か ら選び番号で答えなさい。 1. after )2(ロ)6. (1)4()ゲ 6. beyond 2. for 3. as 4. * to 5. in (2)情の科学は和たちの体がが怒りや興香,不要すなど、多くの果なる感情に対して、 同じょうに反応することを私たらに伝えている。. (3)身に楽しいいと感じるウに言間けせなと、 1レアドレオリンの分泌量が減ることにより、 ストレスが軽非するということ。

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