32) The three activities in an information system that produce the information organizations use to control operations are:
A) information, research, and analysis.
B) input, output, and feedback.
C) data, information, and analysis.
D) data analysis, processing, and feedback.
E) input, processing, and output.
54) The three principal levels within a business
organization hierarchy are:
A) senior management, operational management, and service workers.
B) senior management, middle management, and operational management.
C) senior management, operational management, and information systems.
D) senior management, middle management, and service workers.
E) senior management, data workers, and service workers.
Houses are built with hammers, nails, and wood, but these alone do not make a house. The architecture, design, setting, landscaping, and all of the decisions that lead to the creation of these features are part of the house and are crucial for solving the problem of putting a roof over one's head. Computers and programs are the hammer, nails, and lumber of computer-based information systems, but alone they cannot produce the information a particular organization needs. To understand information systems, you must understand the problems they are designed to solve, their architectural and design elements, and the organizational processes that lead to these solutions.
94) Disciplines that contribute to the technical approach to information systems include:
A) computer science, engineering, and networking.
B) operations research, management science, and computer science.
C) engineering, utilization management, and computer science.
D) management science, computer science, and engineering.
E) economics, sociology, and
psychology.