CAMBRIDGE IELTS 13
TEST 1 (READING)
PASSAGE 3
READING
PASSAGE 3
You
should spend about 20 minutes on Questions
27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Questions
14-19
Artificial artists
Can computers really create works of art?
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The Painting Fool is one of a growing
number of computer programs which, so their makers claim, possess creative
talents. Classical music by an artificial composer has had audiences enraptured,
and even tricked them into believing a human was behind the score. Artworks
painted by a robot have sold for thousands of dollars and been hung in
prestigious galleries. And software has been built which creates art that
could not have been imagined by the programmer.
Human beings are the only species to
perform sophisticated creative acts regularly. If we can break the process
down into computer code, where does that leave human creativity? ‘This is a
question at the very core of humanity,’ says Geraint Wiggins, a computational
creativity researcher at Goldsmiths, University of London. ‘It scares a lot
of people. They are worried that it is taking something special away from
what it means to be human.’
To some extent, we are all familiar
with computerised art. The question is where dies the work of the artist stop
and the creativity of the computer begin? Consider one of the oldest machine
artists, Aaron, a robot that has had paintings exhibited in London’s Tate Modern
and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Aaron can pick up a paintbrush and
paint on canvas on its own creative ideas.
Simon Colton, the designer of the
Painting Fool, is keen to make sure his creation doesn’t attract the same
criticism. Unlike earlier ‘artists’ such as Aaron, the Painting Fool only
needs minimal direction and can come up with its own concepts by going online
for material. The software runs its own web searches and trawls through
social media sites. It is now beginning to display a kind of imagination too,
creating pictures from scratch. One of its original works is a series of
fuzzy landscapes, depicting trees and sky. While some might say they have a
mechanical look. Colton argues that such reactions arise from people’s double
standards toward software-produced and human-produced art. After all, he
says, consider that the Painting Fool painted the landscapes without
referring to a photo. ‘If a child painted a new scene from its head, you’d
say it has a certain level of imagination,’ he points out. ‘The same should
be true of a machine.’ Software bugs can also lead to unexpected results. Some
of the Painting Fool’s paintings of a chair came out in black and white,
thanks to a technical glitch. This gives the work an arts ghostlike quality. Human
artists like the renowned Ellsworth Kelly are lauded for limiting their
colour palette – so why should computers be any different?
Researchers
like Colton don’t believe it is right to measure machine creativity directly
to that of humans who ‘have had millennia to develop our skills’. Others,
though, are fascinated by the prospect that a computer might create something
as original and subtle as our best artists. So far, only one has come close. Composer
David Cope invented a program called Experiments in Musical Intelligence, or
EMI. Not only did EMI create compositions in Cope’s style, but also that of
the most revered classical composers, including Bach,, Chopin, and Mozart. Audiences
were moved to tears, and EMI even fooled classical music experts into
thinking they were hearing genuine Bach. Not everyone was impressed however. Some,
such as Wiggins, have blasted Cope’s work as a pseudoscience, and condemned
him for his deliberately vague explanation of how the software worked. Meanwhile,
Douglas Hofstadter of Indiana University said EMI created replicas which
still rely completely on the original artist’s creative impulses. When audiences
found out the truth they were often outraged with Cope, and one music lover
even tried to punch him. Amid such controversy, Cope destroyed EMI’s vital
databases.
But why did so many people love the
music, yet recoil when they discovered how it was composed? A study by the
computer scientist David Moffat of Glasgow Caledonian University provides a
clue. He asked both expert musicians and non-experts to assess six compositions.
The participants weren’t told beforehand whether the tunes were composed by
humans or computers, but were asked to guess, and then rate how much they
liked each one. People who thought the composer was a computer tended to
dislike the piece more than those who believed it was human. This was true
even among the experts, who might have been expected to be more objective in
their analyses.
Where does this prejudice come from? Paul
Bloom of Yale University has a suggestion, he reckons part of the pleasure we
get from art stems from the creative process behind the work. This can give
it an ‘irresistible essence’, says Bloom. Meanwhile, experiments by Justin
Kruger of New York University have shown that people’s enjoyment of an
artwork increases if they think more time and effort was needed to create it.
Similarly, Colton thinks that when people experience art, they wonder what
the artist might have been thinking or what the artist is trying to tell
them. It seems obvious, therefore, that with computers producing art, this
speculation is cut short – there’s nothing to explore. But as technology
becomes increasingly complex, finding those greater depths in computer art
could become possible. This is precisely why Colton asks the Painting Fool to
tap into online social networks for its inspiration; hopefully this way it
will choose themes that will already be meaningful to us.
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Questions 27-31
Choose
the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write
the correct letter in boxes 27-31 on your answer sheet.
27
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What is the writer
suggesting about computer-produced works in the first paragraph?
A.
People’s acceptance of them can vary
considerably.
B.
A great deal of progress has already been
attained in this field.
C.
They have had more success in some artistic
genres than in others.
D.
The advances are not as significant as the
public believes them to be.
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28
|
According to
Geraint Wiggins, why are many people worried by computer art?
A.
It is aesthetically inferior to human art.
B.
It may ultimately supersede human art,
C.
It undermines a fundamental human quality.
D.
It will lead to a deterioration in human ability.
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29
|
What is a key
difference between Aaron and the Painting Fool?
A.
its programmer’s background.
B.
public responses to its work.
C.
the source of its subject matter.
D.
the technical standard of its output.
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30
|
What point does
Simon Colton make in the fourth paragraph?
A.
Software-produced art is often dismissed as
childish and simplistic.
B.
The same concepts of creativity should not be
applied to all forms of art.
C.
It is unreasonable to expect a machine to be as
imaginative as a human being.
D.
People tend to judge computer art and human art
according to different criteria.
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31
|
The writer
refers to the paintings of a chair as an example of computer art which
A.
achieves a particularly striking effect
B.
exhibits a certain level of genuine artistic skill
C.
closely resembles that of a well-known artist
D.
highlights the technical limitations of the
software.
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Questions
32-37
Complete
each sentence with the correct ending A-G
below.
Write
the correct letter A-G, in boxes 32-37
on your answer sheet.
32
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Simon Colton says it is important to consider the
long-term view when
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33
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David Cope’s
EMI software surprised people by
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34
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Geraint Wiggins
criticised Cope for not
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35
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Douglas
Hofstadter claimed that EMI was
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36
|
Audiences who
had listened to EMI’s music became angry after
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37
|
The participants
in David Moffat’s study had to assess music without
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List
of Ideas
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A
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generating work
that was virtually indistinguishable from that of humans.
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B
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knowing whether it was the work of
humans or software
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C
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producing work
entirely dependent on the imagination of its creator.
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D
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comparing the artistic achievements of
humans and computers.
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E
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revealing the technical
details of his program.
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F
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persuading the public to appreciate computer
art.
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G
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discovering
that it was the product of a computer program
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Questions
38-40
Do
the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage
3?
In boxes
38-40 on your answer sheet, write
YES
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if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
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NO
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if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
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NOT GIVEN
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if it is
impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
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38
|
Moffat’s research may help
explain people’s reactions to EMI.
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39
|
The non-experts
in Moffat’s study all responded in a predictable way.
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40
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Justin Kruger’s
findings cast doubt on Paul Bloom’s theory about people’s prejudice towards
computer art.
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ANSWER
KEY
27
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B
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28
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C
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29
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C
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30
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D
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31
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A
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32
|
D
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33
|
A
|
34
|
E
|
35
|
C
|
36
|
G
|
37
|
B
|
38
|
YES
|
39
|
NOT GIVEN
|
40
|
NO
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