Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer to each of the question.
By mid-century, there will likely be 9 billion people on the planet, consuming ever more resources and leading ever more technologically complex lives. What will our cities be like? How much will artificial intelligence advance? Will global warming trigger catastrophic changes, or will we be able to engineer our way out of the climate change crisis?
Making predictions is, by nature, a dicey business, but to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Smithsonian magazine Big Think asked top minds from a variety of fields to weigh in on what the future holds 40 years from now. The result is our latest special series, Life in 20 50. Demographic changes in world population and population growth will certainly be dramatic. Rockefeller University mathematical biologist Joel Cohen says it's likely that by 2050 the majority of the people in the world will live in urban areas, and will have a significantly higher average age than people today. Cities theorist Richard Florida
thinks urbanization trends will reinvent the education system of the United States, making our economy less real estate driven and erasing the divisions between home and work.
Large migrations from developing countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Mexico, and countries in the Middle East could disrupt western governments and harm the unity of France, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, Poland, and the United Kingdom under the umbrella of the European Union.
And rapidly advancing technology will continue ever more rapidly. According to Bill Mitchell, the late director of MIT's Smart Cities research group, cities of the future won't look like "some sort of science -fiction fantasy" or "Star Trek" but it's likely that "discreet, unobtrusive" technological advances and information overlays, i.e. virtual reality and augmented reality, will change how we live in significant ways. Self-driving cars will make the roads safer, driving more efficient, and provide faster transports. A larger version of driverless cars-driverless trucks-may make long haul drivers obsolete.
Meanwhile, the Internet will continue to radically transform media, destroying the traditional model of what a news organization is, says author and former New York Times Public Editor, Daniel Okrent, who believes the most common kinds of news organizations in the future will be "individuals and small alliances of individuals” reporting and publishing on niche topics.
What does the word "who" in the last paragraph refer to?
A. Daniel Okrent
B. New York Times
C. author
D. traditional model
Đáp án A
Từ “Who" trong đoạn cuối đề cập đến từ nào?
A. Daniel Okrent B. thời báo New York
C. tác giả D. mô hình truyền thống
Căn cứ thông tin đoạn cuối:
"Meanwhile, the Internet will continue to radically transform media, destroying the traditional model of what a news organization is, says author and former New York Times Public Editor, Daniel Okrent, who
believes the most common kinds of news organizations in the future will be "individuals and small alliances of individuals" reporting and publishing on niche topics." (Trong khi đó, Internet vẫn tiếp tục chuyển đổi hoàn toàn phương tiện truyền thông, phá hủy mô hình truyền thống của tổ chức truyền thông, tác giả và là cựu biên tập viên Thời báo New York, Daniel Okrent cho biết, ông tin rằng các loại tổ chức truyền thông phổ biến nhất trong tương lai sẽ là “cá nhân và các liên minh cá nhân nhỏ” chuyên báo cáo và xuất bản các chủ đề thích hơp.)