Questõesde UECE 2017

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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Still in terms of the electronic avatar research, the text mentions that, when scientists analyzed the grown up models (once the sedentary children), they got to the conclusion that they would

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
manage to lead quite a low profile lifestyle.
B
seldom have the chance to change their lifestyle.
C
probably die too soon.
D
cost some trillions of dollars to society.
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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

According to the findings of the research, another aspect related to the consequences of children’s sedentary lifestyle is the fact that when becoming adults they would also

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
lose productivity yearly until they die.
B
lose their jobs more frequently.
C
influence other relatives to keep inactive.
D
travel less than the once active children.
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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

According to the article, the researchers, taking into account the current reality of children in the US, fed the computer program with the information about the lack of exercising and the calorie intaking patterns and made the computer model go through the growing process year by year, thus revealing that these children

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
maintained quite a slow pace of development.
B
grew more and more overweight.
C
became adults who are healthy.
D
grew too fast in relation to other groups.
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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The new study conducted in the US linking the lack of children’s physical activity and the huge expenses in the coming years was carried out with data about children

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
who are in the age group 8 to 11.
B
whose parents are overweight.
C
whose families lead sedentary lives.
D
who never take part in sports.
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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

In terms of how the study was conducted, the text mentions that researchers used a computer program that made it possible for every child to be

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
analyzed according to different sets of influential factors.
B
isolated from their family context.
C
represented by an electronic avatar to simulate their growth.
D
grouped according to geographical criteria.
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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

In terms of the future financial costs for individuals and the society as a result of inactivity in young people, it is mentioned that they

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
have been the subject of many studies and public policies.
B
had not been calculated before this new study mentioned in the text.
C
have always been a concern in the academic world.
D
were carefully analyzed by some European countries.
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UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

According to the text, the lack of exercise in childhood years is associated with very early health problems such as

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
obesity and type 2 diabetes.
B
heart conditions and respiratory diseases.
C
cancer and depression.
D
diabetes and lungs conditions.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Ecologia e ciências ambientais, Cadeias e teias alimentares

Todo ser vivo precisa de nutrientes, que são obtidos por meio de relações complexas estabelecidas entre os diferentes grupos de organismos existentes na natureza. Essas relações são representadas por diagramas denominados teias alimentares. Uma teia alimentar que apresenta uma forrageira, um bovino e um ascomiceto compreende, respectivamente, um produtor,

A
um consumidor primário e um consumidor quaternário.
B
um consumidor secundário e um decompositor.
C
um consumidor primário e um decompositor.
D
um consumidor terciário e um consumidor quaternário.
dc1587a4-cb
UECE 2017 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

As to how physically active American and European children are, recent studies show that

                                              T E X T


      If all of the children who currently are sedentary started exercising every day, societies could save enormous amounts of money in the coming decades and have healthier citizens as a whole, according to a remarkable new study. In the United States alone, we could expect to save more than $120 billion every year in health care and associated expenses. The study is the first to use sophisticated computer simulations to arrive at a literal and sobering societal price tag for allowing our children to be sedentary.

      Inactivity is, of course, widespread among young people today. Recent research shows that in the United States and Europe, physical activity tends to peak at about age 7 for both boys and girls and tail off continually throughout adolescence. More than two-thirds of children in the United States rarely exercise at all.

      The immediate health consequences for inactive children and their families are worrisome. Childhood obesity, which is linked to lack of exercise, is common, as is the incidence of Type 2 diabetes and other health problems related to being overweight among children as young as 6.

      But the long-term financial costs of inactivity in the young, both for them and society as a whole, have never been quantified. So for the new study, which was published this week in Health Affairs, researchers with the Global Obesity Prevention Center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and other institutions decided to create a bogglingly complex computer model of what the future could look like if we do or do not get more of our children moving.

      The researchers began by gathering as much public data as is currently available about the health, weight and physical activity patterns of all 31.7 million American children now aged 8 to 11, using large-scale databases from the Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other groups.

      The researchers fed this information into a computerized modeling program that created an electronic avatar for every American child today. In line with reality, two-thirds of these children were programmed to rarely exercise and many were overweight or obese.

      The scientists then had the simulated children grow up. Using estimations about how calorie intake and activity patterns affect body weight, the program changed each virtual child’s body day-by-day and year-by-year into adulthood. Most became increasingly overweight.

      As the simulated children became adults, the scientists then modeled each one’s health, based on obesity-associated risks for heart disease, diabetes, stroke and cancer, and also the probable financial price of dealing with those diseases (adjusted for future inflation), both in terms of direct expenses for hospitalizations, drugs and so on, and lost productivity because of someone’s being ill.

      The results were staggering. According to the computer model, the costs of today’s 8- to 11- year-olds being inactive and consequently overweight would be almost $3 trillion in medical expenses and lost productivity every year once the children reached adulthood and for decades until their deaths.

      But when the researchers tweaked children’s activity levels within their model, the numbers began to look quite different. If they presumed that, in an imaginary America, half of all children exercised vigorously for about 25 minutes three times a week, such as during active recess or sports or, more ambitiously, ran around and moved for at least an hour every day, which is the amount of youth exercise recommended by the C.D.C., their virtual lives were transformed.

      Most obviously, the incidence of childhood obesity fell by more than 4 percent, a change that resonated throughout the simulated children’s lives and society. There were about half a million fewer cases of adult-onset heart disease, diabetes, cancer and strokes in this simulation, and the society-wide costs associated with these illnesses dropped by about $32 billion every year if the children romped about for 25 minutes three times per week and by almost $37 billion if they moved for an hour every day.

      The impacts were even more substantial when the researchers assumed that 100 percent of the children who are now sedentary got regular exercise. In this scenario, the annual total costs during adulthood from obesity-associated medical expenses and lost productivity plummeted by about $62 billion when children were active three times a week and by more than $120 billion every year when all of the virtual children played and moved for at least an hour each day.

                                                     From: https://www.nytimes.com May 3, 2017

A
they are usually involved in more physical activities from age 7 on.
B
most of them only become interested in physical exercise in their late adolescence.
C
boys and girls have a significantly different behavior when it comes to physical activities.
D
both boys and girls seem to have the maximum of physical activities around age seven.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Ciclos biogeoquímicos, Ecologia e ciências ambientais

Considerando o ciclo do carbono, analise as seguintes afirmações:


I. O dióxido de carbono na atmosfera é absorvido pelas plantas, sendo o carbono contido em sua molécula devolvido à atmosfera pelo processo de fotossíntese.

II. Os animais comem vegetais, decompõem seus açúcares e liberam carbono na atmosfera, nos oceanos e no solo.

III. Plantas e animais são decompostos pela ação de microrganismos que devolvem carbono ao meio ambiente.

IV. Os animais, através da respiração, retiram da atmosfera parte do carbono assimilado, na forma de CO2.


Está correto o que se afirma somente em

A
II e III.
B
II e IV.
C
I e III.
D
I e IV.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - A química da vida, Moléculas, células e tecidos

Sobre proteínas que foram desnaturadas sob condições de elevadas temperaturas, é correto afirmar que

A
tiveram sua estrutura primária rompida irreversivelmente.
B
apesar de modificadas, permaneceram com sua estrutura primária, composta pela sequência de aminoácidos ligados entre si.
C
foram temporariamente modificadas, podendo assumir sua conformação espacial original em condições ideais de temperatura.
D
se tornaram inadequadas para o consumo humano, já que foram estruturalmente alteradas.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Evolução biológica, Origem e evolução da vida

O fixismo e o evolucionismo foram correntes de pensamento utilizadas para explicar a diversidade das espécies. Sobre essas correntes, é correto afirmar que

A
o fixismo considera que as diferentes espécies são permanentes, perfeitas e mutáveis e que foram originadas, independentemente, umas das outras.
B
para o evolucionismo, as espécies atuais são o resultado de lentas e sucessivas transformações sofridas pelas espécies do passado, ao longo dos tempos.
C
a geração espontânea, ou abiogênese, é uma corrente do evolucionismo que acredita na criação dos seres vivos a partir da matéria inanimada.
D
o criacionismo considera que os seres vivos foram criados por ação divina, portanto, são perfeitos e instáveis ao longo do tempo.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Hereditariedade e diversidade da vida

Os genes letais foram identificados, em 1905, pelo geneticista francês Lucien Cuénot. A acondroplasia é uma forma de nanismo humano condicionada por um alelo dominante D que prejudica o desenvolvimento ósseo. Pessoas que apresentam a acondroplasia são heterozigotas e pessoas normais são homozigotas recessivas. Assinale a opção que corresponde ao genótipo em que o gene é considerado letal.

A
DD
B
Dd
C
dd.
D
D_
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Sistema Respiratório Humano, Identidade dos seres vivos

Em experimentos realizados com ratos, por pesquisadores da Universidade da Califórnia, observou-se que os pulmões desses roedores produziram mais da metade das plaquetas. Segundo Mark Looney, autor principal do estudo, isso significa que os pulmões humanos podem produzir sangue, uma função totalmente inesperada, e que precisa ser investigada.

Fonte: http://super.abril.com.br/ciencia/descobertafuncao-inesperada-dos-pulmoes/


Considerando o conhecimento atual sobre o sistema respiratório humano, é correto afirmar que

A
os componentes do sistema respiratório humano são os pulmões e as vias respiratórias (cavidades nasais, boca, faringe, traqueia e bronquíolos).
B
todas as células do corpo humano realizam respiração celular no interior das mitocôndrias.
C
os produtos da respiração celular são água e oxigênio; a água formada é reutilizada pelas células, mas o oxigênio não.
D
os alvéolos pulmonares são pequenos sacos de paredes finas localizados na extremidade dos brônquios.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Problemas ambientais e medidas de conservação, Ecologia e ciências ambientais

Com o objetivo de resolver o problema de erosão em sua propriedade, um fazendeiro comprou mudas de plantas indicadas por um biólogo. Essas mudas apresentam raízes fasciculadas, nervuras paralelas e flores trímeras, portanto, são representantes das

A
leguminosas.
B
samambaias.
C
cicadáceas.
D
gramíneas.
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UECE 2017 - Biologia - Sistema Nervoso Humano, Identidade dos seres vivos

O mal de Alzheimer era considerado uma doença que surgia devido à degeneração das células do hipocampo, área cerebral da qual dependem os mecanismos da memória. No entanto, pesquisadores italianos publicaram estudo na revista Nature Communications, em abril de 2017, no qual afirmaram que o mecanismo de origem da doença está na área tegmental ventral, onde é produzida a dopamina.

Fonte: http://www.jornalciencia.com/pesquisadores-italianos-podem-ter-descoberto-a-causa-do-alzheimer/


Em relação ao sistema nervoso, é correto afirmar que

A
é organizado em: 1. central, responsável pela condução de informação entre os órgãos receptores, o sistema nervoso periférico e os órgãos efetores, e 2. periférico, que realiza o processamento e integração de informações.
B
o córtex cerebral apresenta lobos que coordenam funções específicas, e são denominados de acordo com os ossos cranianos que os recobrem, a saber: parental, temporal, occipital e olfativo.
C
o tálamo e o hipotálamo ficam embaixo do cérebro. O tálamo é uma estrutura do tamanho de um grão de ervilha e é importante para o controle das emoções e regulação da homeostase corporal.
D
a medula espinhal é um cordão cilíndrico, com um canal interno, revestido por três membranas fibrosas, as meninges, denominadas de: dura-máter, aracnoide e pia-máter.
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UECE 2017 - Química - Substâncias e suas propriedades, Transformações Químicas: elementos químicos, tabela periódica e reações químicas, Transformações Químicas, Interações Atômicas: Geometria Molecular, Polaridade da ligação e da Molécula, Forças Intermoleculares e Número de Oxidação.

O cloreto de sódio é uma substância inorgânica pertencente à função química dos sais. Suas principais características são a dissociação e o sabor salgado. O consumo em excesso de cloreto de sódio pode acarretar os seguintes prejuízos ao ser humano: aumento da incidência de cãibras, aumento da pressão arterial, sobrecarga dos rins, aumento da retenção de líquidos no organismo, destruição da vitamina E e diminuição da produção do iodo no organismo. No que diz respeito a essa substância, assinale a afirmação verdadeira.

            

A
Por tratar-se de uma substância originada por ligação iônica, ou seja, por ser um composto iônico, o cloreto de sódio é apolar.
B
A obtenção do cloreto de sódio pode ser realizada a partir da reação química de simples troca entre o gás cloro e o sódio metálico.
C
Na estrutura química do cloreto de sódio, o cátion sódio está circundado por 6 (seis) ânions cloretos.
D
Uma forma de obtenção do cloreto de sódio quimicamente se dá por meio da reação do ácido clorídrico e o hidreto de sódio.
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UECE 2017 - Química - Teoria Atômica: átomos e sua estrutura - número atômico, número de massa, isótopos, massa atômica, Grandezas: massa, volume, mol, massa molar, constante de Avogadro e Estequiometria., Transformações Químicas, Representação das transformações químicas

A massa atômica de um elemento é calculada a partir da

            

A
média aritmética das massas atômicas de seus isótopos.
B
média geométrica das massas atômicas de seus isótopos.
C
média ponderada das massas atômicas de seus isótopos.
D
soma de prótons e nêutrons do isótopo mais abundante.
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UECE 2017 - Química - Isomeria: Isomeria Espacial: Isomeria Geométrica (cis-trans) e Isomeria Óptica., Química Orgânica, Isomeria: Isomeria Plana: Cadeia, Posição, Compensação, Função e Tautomeria., Principais Funções Orgânicas: Hidrocarbonetos: Alcano, Alceno, Alcino, Alcadieno, Ciclos Alcano e Alceno, Aromáticos. Haletos.

Circula periodicamente pela internet, em e-mails, uma advertência segundo a qual o aquecimento de comida colocada em recipientes de plástico, no forno de micro-ondas, libera dioxina, uma substância que pode causar câncer. O Instituto Nacional do Câncer, através de sua Coordenação de Prevenção e Vigilância do Câncer, emitiu nota técnica sobre a dioxina, em que confirma não só a toxicidade da substância, mas também admite seu potencial carcinogênico. Existem dois isômeros de dioxina: o-dioxina e p-dioxina, ambos são heterocíclicos de fórmula molecular C4H4O2.


Com relação à fórmula desses isômeros, é correto afirmar que

            

A
por serem compostos heterocíclicos, pertencem à classe dos aromáticos.
B
pertencem à função orgânica dos éteres.
C
nos isômeros, os dois átomos de oxigênio estão fora da cadeia carbônica cíclica.
D
o isômero o-dioxina possui característica de um peróxido.
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UECE 2017 - Química - Vidrarias, Técnicas de Laboratório

O equipamento usado em laboratório para medidas precisas de líquidos em análise volumétrica é denominado

            

A
bureta.
B
pisseta.
C
proveta.
D
pipeta.