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ted演讲稿范文(3篇)

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演讲稿具有观点鲜明,内容具有鼓动性的特点。现如今,演讲稿的使用越来越广泛,写起演讲稿来就毫无头绪?下面是差异网整理的3篇《ted演讲稿范文》,希望能够给您提供一些帮助。

经典TED英语演讲稿 篇一

The problem is that — lets say she got pregnant that day, that day — nine months of pregnancy, three months of maternity leave, six months to catch your breath — Fast-forward two years, more often — and as Ive seen it — women start thinking about this way earlier — when they get engaged, or married, when they start thinking about having a child, which can take a long time. One woman came to see me about this. She looked a little young. And I said, "So are you and your husband thinking about having a baby?" And she said, "Oh no, Im not married." She didnt even have a boyfriend.

ted中文演讲稿 篇二

尊敬的各位评委、领导、老师,亲爱的同学:大家下午好!

今天学校举行这一次演讲比赛,我有幸被同学们推上来演讲,是我的极大的。荣幸,感谢大家的支持,我相信我一定能做好的。今天我演讲题目是《低碳环保,大家一起来》。

随着社会日益快速发展,我们的环境均受到不同程度的损害,我想大家一定都知道现在的环境被糟蹋成什么样了,新闻报道常出现哪里的环境又被破坏、又被污染,这些都是因为我们这些人类没有做到低碳环保的原因。我们生活水平逐渐提高,导致了很多问题的出现,比如白色污染、空气污染、水污染,这些都是环境污染,也都是我们自己造成的。

生活越过越好,致使我们要求也都提高了,以前对于大自然那么珍惜,现在却一直在向大自然索取,严重的损害了大自然的平衡,所以环境的问题越来越严重,形势越来越严峻,这些都是我们现在就要思考的问题,我们不能不管不顾的。在此我作为一个小学生,更是要注意这问题,因为环境是我们生存的根本,没有这个环境孕育我们,就不会有现在的我们美好的生活,一切都是这个环境赋予我们的财富。我们就更不能忘恩给地球母亲这样的回报。

为了保护我们生存的环境,我们要低碳环保,要解决这些污染,因为都是我们自己造成的。自然苦果由我们自己承受,同时也面临着去解决它。生活中对于白色污染的问题的解决,就是我们不用塑料袋去装东西,尽量用布袋这些能够重复使用的袋子,不用一次性的袋子,塑料袋都不容易分解,很容易造成环境的一个污染。空气之所以被污染,是因为我们之前发电用的是煤炭,煤炭在燃烧的过程会产生大量的一氧化碳和二氧化碳,以及小汽车产生的尾气也是对空气的污染,那我们就用风发电也、用水发电,这些都是环保的方法,尽量少开私家车,使用自行车和坐公交车,这些方式也是对空气环境的一种保护。水污染就是我们尽量要不要排放污水到江河里,做到一水多用。

我相信只要我们大家一起去做,在未来一定可以解决这些问题的,首先就是低碳环保从我们自己做起,团结起来才行,所以我们今后要保持低碳生活、环保生活。

谢谢大家!

经典TED英语演讲稿 篇三

Do you think it's possible to control someone's attention? Even more than that, what about predicting human behavior? I think those are interesting ideas, if you could. I mean, for me, that would be the perfect superpower, actually kind of an evil way of approaching it. But for myself, in the past, I've spent the last 20 years studying human behavior from a rather unorthodox way: picking pockets. When we think of misdirection, we think of something as looking off to the side, when actually it's often the things that are right in front of us that are the hardest things to see, the things that you look at every day that you're blinded to.

For example, how many of you still have your cell phones on you right now? Great. Double-check. Make sure you still have them on you. I was doing some shopping beforehand. Now you've looked at them probably a few times today, but I'm going to ask you a question about them. Without looking at your cell phone directly yet, can you remember the icon in the bottom right corner? Bring them out, check, and see how accurate you were. How'd you do? Show of hands. Did we get it?

Now that you're done looking at those, close them down, because every phone has something in common. No matter how you organize the icons, you still have a clock on the front. So, without looking at your phone, what time was it? You just looked at your clock, right? It's an interesting idea. Now, I'll ask you to take that a step further with a game of trust. Close your eyes. I realize I'm asking you to do that while you just heard there's a pickpocket in the room, but close your eyes.

Now, you've been watching me for about 30 seconds. With your eyes closed, what am I wearing? Make your best guess. What color is my shirt? What color is my tie? Now open your eyes. By a show of hands, were you right?

It's interesting, isn't it? Some of us are a little bit more perceptive than others. It seems that way. But I have a different theory about that, that model of attention. They have fancy models of attention, Posner's trinity model of attention. For me, I like to think of it very simple, like a surveillance system. It's kind of like you have all these fancy sensors, and inside your brain is a little security guard. For me, I like to call him Frank. So Frank is sitting at a desk. He's got all sorts of cool information in front of him, high-tech equipment, he's got cameras, he's got a little phone that he can pick up, listen to the ears, all these senses, all these perceptions. But attention is what steers your perceptions, is what controls your reality. It's the gateway to the mind. If you don't attend to something, you can't be aware of it. But ironically, you can attend to something without being aware of it. That's why there's the cocktail effect: When you're in a party, you're having conversations with someone, and yet you can recognize your name and you didn't even realize you were listening to that.

Now, for my job, I have to play with techniques to exploit this, to play with your attention as a limited resource. So if I could control how you spend your attention, if I could maybe steal your attention through a distraction. Now, instead of doing it like misdirection and throwing it off to the side, instead, what I choose to focus on is Frank, to be able to play with the Frank inside your head, your little security guard, and get you, instead of focusing on your external senses, just to go internal for a second. So if I ask you to access a memory, like, what is that? What just happened? Do you have a wallet? Do you have an American Express in your wallet? And when I do that, your Frank turns around. He accesses the file. He has to rewind the tape. And what's interesting is, he can't rewind the tape at the same time that he's trying to process new data.

Now, I mean, this sounds like a good theory, but I could talk for a long time and tell you lots of things, and they may be true, a portion of them, but I think it's better if I tried to show that to you here live. So if I come down, I'm going to do a little bit of shopping. Just hold still where you are.

Hello, how are you? It's lovely to see you. You did a wonderful job onstage. You have a lovely watch that doesn't come off very well. Do you have your ring as well? Good. Just taking inventory. You're like a buffet. It's hard to tell where to start, there's so many great things.

Hi, how are you? Good to see you.

Hi, sir, could you stand up for me, please? Just right where you are. Oh, you're married. You follow directions well. That's nice to meet you, sir. You don't have a whole lot inside your pockets. Anything down by the pocket over here? Hopefully so. Have a seat. There you go. You're doing well.

以上就是差异网为大家带来的3篇《ted演讲稿范文》,希望对您有一些参考价值,更多范文样本、模板格式尽在差异网。

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