問題詳情

【題組】45
(A)He argues that anti-doping authorities have not adequately defined and publicized how they arrived at the criteria usedto determine whether or not a test result is positive.
(B)Some scientists believe that accepting “legal limits” of specific metabolites without such rigorous verification goesagainst the foundational standards of modern science.
(C)These were just a few in a long line of cases in which competitors had been accused of using performance-enhancingsubstances.
(D)Drug testing should not be exempt from the scientific principles and standards that apply to other biomedical sciences.

參考答案

答案:A
難度:適中0.573333
統計:A(43),B(17),C(9),D(5),E(0)

用户評論

【用戶】張懷安

【年級】大一上

【評論內容】【完整文章】Before the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing took place, several athletes had faced charges of taking substances banned by the International Olympic Committee. These were just a few in a long line of cases in which competitors had been accused of using performance-enhancing substances. Far from quelling such practices, the advent of drug testing in sports in the late 1960s stimulated an arms race between regulators and the cheats. Today, some athletes and their coaches continue to risk their reputation, and sometimes the athletes' long-term health, for the cha...

【用戶】張懷安

【年級】大一上

【評論內容】【完整文章】Before the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing took place, several athletes had faced charges of taking substances banned by the International Olympic Committee. These were just a few in a long line of cases in which competitors had been accused of using performance-enhancing substances. Far from quelling such practices, the advent of drug testing in sports in the late 1960s stimulated an arms race between regulators and the cheats. Today, some athletes and their coaches continue to risk their reputation, and sometimes the athletes' long-term health, for the cha...

【用戶】張懷安

【年級】大一上

【評論內容】【完整文章】Before the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing took place, several athletes had faced charges of taking substances banned by the International Olympic Committee. These were just a few in a long line of cases in which competitors had been accused of using performance-enhancing substances. Far from quelling such practices, the advent of drug testing in sports in the late 1960s stimulated an arms race between regulators and the cheats. Today, some athletes and their coaches continue to risk their reputation, and sometimes the athletes' long-term health, for the cha...