Art to the Aid of Technology Reading Answers contains 13 questions to answer in 20 minutes. Art to the Aid of Technology Reading Answers consists of three types of questions; choose correct statement, choose the correct paragraph and Choose the appropriate letters. Candidates need to skim the passage for keywords, understand the concept, and answer based on the given instructions. To Choose the appropriate letters, candidates are required to match the given options with the paragraphs presented in the paragraph. In choosing correct statement and paragraph, candidates need to understand the information and select the correct option. Candidates must read the IELTS reading passage, identify keywords, and recognize synonyms to answer the question.
Check: Get 10 Free IELTS Sample Papers
Check: Register for IELTS Coaching - Join for Free Trial Class Now
Read the Passage to Answer the Following Questions
What caricatures can teach us about facial recognition
Solution and Explanation
Questions 1-6:
Reading Passage has ten paragraphs, A-J.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
You may use any letter more than once.
Answer: C
Supporting statement: We code each new face we encounter not in absolute terms but in the several ways it differs markedly from the mean.
Keyword: Face
Keyword location: Paragraph C, Third sentence
Explanation: It is easy to remember a caricature, rather than the person in real life. Large eyes, deformed nose, fleshy cheeks of a caricature makes the picture larger, which is easy to remember. Thus, most remembered pictures are caricatures.
Answer: G
Supporting statement: Jason Seiler recounts how he trained his mind for years, beginning in middle school, until he gained what he regards as nothing less than a second sight.
Keyword: beginning, years
Keyword location: Paragraph G, second sentence
Explanation: One caricature artist, Jason Seiler states that it takes years to be a good caricaturist.
Answer: D
Supporting statement: Just recently, a couple who accidentally swapped passports at an airport in England sailed through electronic gates that were supposed to match their faces to file photos.
Keyword: swapped, airport
Keyword location: Paragraph D, last sentence
Explanation: A couple swapped their passports in an English airport. Face recognition system failed to recognize them. Electronic gates for face recognition failed to do the work properly. Thus, the current security system is not reliable at all.
Answer: B
Supporting statement: The fact that the sparest cartoon of a familiar face, even a single line dashed off in two seconds, can be identified by our brains in an instant
Keyword: illustration, cartoon, single line, face
Keyword location: paragraph B, first sentence
Explanation: A roughly drawing caricature of a person also can be recognized. Our brain is able to understand the character of the character, even though it has extra lines in it.
Answer: F
Supporting statement: In tests, Frowd’s technique has increased positive identifications from as low as 3 percent to upwards of 30 percent.
Keyword: identification
Keyword location: Paragraph F, last sentence
Explanation: Before Frowd’s technique, there was only 3 percent positive identification occurred by caricatures. But after the invention of the technique, the identification has increased to 30 percent.
Answer: D
Supporting statement: But now a decade has passed, and face-recognition systems still perform miserably in real-world conditions
Keyword: face recognition, miserably
Keyword location: Paragraph D, Third sentence
Explanation: Better cameras and faster computers of face-recognition electronic systems are not reliable to identify a person. In this case, man made caricatures are more reliable. It helps to identify a person without any mistakes.
Questions 7-10:
Look at the following statements and the list of people, A-C, below.
Match each statement with the correct person.
List of People
Answer: B-Jason Seiler
Supporting statement: When the ratios between the features are correct, you see that face instantly.
Keyword: Seiler, individual, recognize
Keyword location: Paragraph G, third sentence
Explanation: Jason Seiler states that the ratio of the features of the face is the most important thing to be considered while making a caricature. If the features of the face are correctly proportioned, then it is very easy to identify the person by the caricature.
Answer: C-Pawan Sinha
Supporting statement: His lab at MIT is preparing to computationally analyze hundreds of caricatures this year, from dozens of different artists, with the hope of tapping their intuitive knowledge of what is and isn’t crucial for recognition
Keyword: caricature, tapping, knowledge, recognition
Keyword location: Paragraph H, third sentence
Explanation: Pawan Sinha analyzes hundreds of caricatures from different artists, just to understand the most essential thing for identifying a person from those caricatures. Different characters represent different ways of seeing a face. It helps to understand different perspectives.
Answer: B-Jason Seiler
Supporting statement: A lot of people think that caricature is about picking out someone’s worst feature and exaggerating it as far as you can,’ Seiler says.
Keyword: caricature, worst, feature
Keyword location: Paragraph G, fourth sentence
Explanation: Seiler states that people misunderstood caricatures with the worst representation of a person’s face. But actually it is the depiction of well proportioned features of a face, which helps to find the truth within the caricature.
Answer: A-Charlie Frowd
Supporting statement: Frowd’s research supports the idea that we all store memories as caricatures, but with our own personal degree of amplification. So, as an animated composite depicts faces at varying stages of caricature, viewers respond to the stage that is most recognizable to them.
Keyword: memories, amplification
Keyword location: Paragraph F, third sentence
Explanation: According to Frowd’s research, an animated caricature is best to remember the person. Though it varies from person to person, due to their own amplifying capacity. Thus, it is obvious to have different forms of caricature of the same person.
Questions 11-13:
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Sinha’s Project
Sinha’s aim in the project is to come up with a specific number of what he terms 11_________ that are key to identification purposes.
Answer: Hirschfeld attributes,
Supporting statement: On a given face, four of 20 such Hirschfeld attributes, as Sinha plans to call them, will be several standard deviations greater than the mean.
Keyword: Hirschfeld attributes, deviation
Keyword location: paragraph J, first sentence
Explanation: Sinha wanted to differentiate the standard caricature from the real picture. From Hirschfeld's attribution, he was able to understand that exaggerated features are the main key of perfect caricature.
He hopes these can be used to enable a 12_________ to identify faces more quickly and more accurately.
Answer: automated system
Supporting statement: As matters stand today, an automated system must compare its target faces against the millions of continually altering faces it encounters.
Keyword: automated system, altering, faces
Keyword location: Paragraph J, third sentence
Explanation: Man made caricatures are accurate enough to recognize the person. But it takes more time than the automated system. Though it works faster, the automated system did not know how to create different caricatures for one person.
In order to do this, his team must examine the most frequently 13_________ features in a large number of cartoon faces.
Answer: exaggerated
Supporting statement: But in all cases, it’s the exaggerated areas of the face that hold the key.
Keyword: exaggerated, face
Keyword Location: Paragraph J, second sentence.
Explanation: Sinha analyzes that it is the exaggerated features of the face that helps to create a proper caricature for one person. Exaggerated cartoon faces are easy to recognize.
Read More IELTS Reading Related Samples
Comments