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York University - ADMS 2511 Chapter 4: Managing Knowledge and Data True/False 1)Data are centralized in organizations
York University - ADMS 2511
Chapter 4: Managing Knowledge and Data
True/False
1)Data are centralized in organizations.
- An increasing amount of external data needs to be considered in making organizational decisions.
- The end result of the Data Life Cycle is the generation of data.
- It is important for applications and data to be dependent on each other.
- A negative value for a student’s grade point average is an example of a data integrity problem.
- An entity is a person, place, thing, or event about which information is maintained.
- An attribute is any characteristic or quality describing a particular entity.
- The secondary key is a field that has some identifying information but does not identify a record with complete uniqueness.
- Entity-relationship diagrams are documents that show the entities, attributes, and relationships of a conceptual data model.
- You would be an instance of your university’s STUDENT class.
- Database management systems are software programs (or groups of programs) that provide access to a database.
- The relational database model is based on the concept of two-dimensional tables.
- Structured query language is a relational database language that enables users to perform complicated searches with relatively simple statements.
- The data dictionary stores definitions of data elements, characteristics that use the data elements, physical representation of the data elements, data ownership, and security.
- When data are normalized, attributes in the table depend on the primary key and any secondary keys.
- In a data warehouse, data are constantly purged as new data come in.
- Operational data are usually kept in an organization’s data warehouse.
- Online analytical processing involves the analysis of accumulated data by end users.
- Data marts are designed for the end-user needs in a strategic business unit or department.
- Master data are generated and captured by operational systems.
- Tacit knowledge is the more objective, rational, and technical types of knowledge.
- Explicit knowledge, the cumulative store of subjective learning, is personal and hard to formalize.
Multiple Choice
- Your is the collection of traceable data that is captured when you use various information technologies such as credit cards or the Internet.
- data profile
- data shadow
- database file
- database record
- database element
- Over time, your data shadow .
- decreases in size
- stays approximately the same size
- increases your privacy
- does not affect your privacy
- increases in size
- In the chapter opening case, Mediatech’s primary use of its customers’ data shadows involved which of the following systems or procedures?
- business intelligence
-
- data analysis
- direct mail marketing
- transaction processing
- decision support
- In the chapter opening case, Mediatech’s principal problem with managing data was which of the following?
- There was too much data to manage
- Capturing and storing the data was too expensive
- Outdated database management systems
- Degraded data
- Company did not have an effective data warehouse
- It is very difficult to manage data for which of the following reasons?
- The amount of data stays about the same over time.
- Data are scattered throughout organizations.
- The decreasing amount of external data needs to be considered.
- Data security is easy to maintain.
- Data are stored in the same format throughout organizations.
- When customers access a Web site and make purchases, they generate :
- tracking cookies
- information
- clickstream data
- Web data
- hyperlink data
- Which of the following is not a source for external data?
- commercial databases
- corporate databases
- sensors
- satellites
-
- government reports
- The end result of the Data Life Cycle is the generation of .
- information
- data
- knowledge
- wisdom
- decisions
- Place the following members of the data hierarchy in the correct order:
- bit – byte – field – record – database – file
- bit – field – byte – record – file – database
- byte – bit – record – field – database
- bit – byte – field – record – file – database
- bit – record – field – byte – file -- database
- No alphabetic characters in a Social Security Number field is an example of :
- data isolation
- data integrity
- data consistency
- data redundancy
- application/data dependence
- occurs when applications cannot access data associated with other applications.
- Data isolation
- Data integrity
- Data consistency
- Data redundancy
- Application/Data dependence
- occurs when the same data are stored in many places.
- Data isolation
- Data integrity
- Data consistency
- Data redundancy
- Application/Data dependence
- occurs when various copies of the data agree.
- Data isolation
- Data integrity
- Data consistency
- Data redundancy
- Application/Data dependence
- You have moved to a different apartment, but your electricity bill continues to go to your old address. The Post Office in your town has a problem with its data management, which is:
- Data redundancy
- Data inconsistency
- Data isolation
- Data security
- Data dependence
- In the data hierarchy, the smallest element is the .
- record
- bit
- byte
- character
- file
- A(n) is a logical grouping of characters into a word, a small group of words, or a complete number.
- byte
- field
- record
- file
- database
- A(n) is a logical grouping of related fields.
- byte
- field
- record
- file
- database
- A(n) is a logical grouping of related records.
- byte
- field
- record
- file
- database
- A(n) represents a single character, such as a letter, number, or symbol.
- byte
- field
- record
- file
- database
- In a database, the primary key field is used to .
- specify an entity
-
- create linked lists
- identify duplicated data
- uniquely identify a record
- uniquely identify an attribute
- are fields in a record that have some identifying information but typically do not identify the record with complete accuracy.
- Primary keys
- Secondary keys
- Duplicate keys
- Attribute keys
- Record keys
- As an individual student in your university’s student database, you are a(n) of the STUDENT class.
- instance
- individual
- representative
- entity
- relationship
- At your university, students can take more than one class, and each class can have more than one student. This is an example of what kind of relationship?
- one-to-one
- one-to-many
- many-to-one
- many-to-many
- some-to-many
- In a university’s relational database, the student record contains information regarding the student’s last name. The last name is a(n):
- attribute
-
- entity
- primary key
- object
- file
- A database management system is primarily a(n) .
- file handling program
- data modeling program
- interface between applications and a database
- interface between data and a database
- interface between queries and a database
- In the relational database model, related tables can be joined when they contain common .
- primary keys
- rows
- records
- columns
- files
- tell the database management system which records are joined with others in related tables.
- Primary keys
- Secondary keys
- Common attributes
- Common files
- Common fields
- Data dictionaries perform all of the following functions except:
- Providing information on each record
- Providing information on why attributes are needed in the database
- Defining the format necessary to enter data into the database
- Providing information on name of attributes
- Providing information on how often attributes should be updated
- In a relational database, every row represents a .
- file
- record
- attribute
- primary key
- secondary key
- A standardized language used to manipulate data is .
- MS-Access
- Oracle
- query-by-example language
- structured query language
- data manipulation language
- Data dictionaries provide which of the following advantages to the organization?
- reduce data inconsistency
- provide for faster program development
- make it easier to modify data and information
- all of the above
- is a method for analyzing and reducing a relational database to its most streamlined form.
- Structured query
- Normalization
- Query by example
- Joining
- Relational analysis
- When data are normalized, attributes in the table depend only on the .
- secondary key
- common attribute
- primary key
- common row
- common record
- Refer to IT’s About Business 4.1. The benefits of electronic medical records include all of the following except:
- help eliminate duplicate medical tests
- provide correct medical information to medical professionals
- reduce administrative costs
- help to prevent serious illnesses
- increase patients’ information security
- The data in a data warehouse have which of the following characteristics?
- They are organized by subject.
- They are coded in different formats.
- They are updated in real time.
- They are typically retained for a defined, but limited, period of time.
- They are organized in a hierarchical structure.
- The data in a data warehouse:
- are updated constantly in real time.
- are updated in batch mode, approximately once per day.
- are not updated.
- are purged constantly as new data enter.
- are available for MIS analysts, but not users.
- The process of moving data from various sources into the data warehouse is called:
-
- uploading.
- extracting, transforming, and loading.
- online transaction processing.
- master data management.
- online analytical processing.
- Compared to data warehouses, data marts have which one of the following characteristics?
- cost less
- have longer lead time for implementation
- have central rather than local control
- contain more information
- are harder to navigate
- Refer to IT’s About Business 4.2. Unum decided it needed a data warehouse for all of the following reasons except :
- to improve data collection efforts.
- to support data integration.
- to support centralized reporting.
- to provide consistent performance metrics across the organization.
- to enhance management’s understanding of product performance.
- is a formal approach to managing data consistently across an entire organization.
- Database management
- Enterprise information management
- Data warehousing
- Data governance
- Data mart
Ans : D
- provide(s) companies with a single version of the truth for their data.
- Data warehouses
- Data marts
- Databases
-
- Master data management
- Enterprise information management
- Organizations are turning to data governance for which of the following reasons?
- They have too little data.
- They are responding to federal regulations.
- Their data are typically structured.
- Their data are usually located in the organizations’ databases.
- Data across their organizations are generally consistent.
- describe the activities of the business, where categorize(s), aggregate(s), and evaluate(s) data generated by the organization’s activities.
- Transaction data, master data
- Source data, transaction data
- Operational data, master data
- Master data, source data
- Business dimensional data, databases
- is a process that helps organizations identify, select, organize, disseminate, transfer, and apply expertise that are part of the organization’s memory and typically reside inside the organization in an unstructured manner.
- Discovery
- Knowledge management
- Decision support
- Online analytical processing
- Data mining
- can be exercised to solve a problem, where may or may not be able to be exercised to solve a problem.
- Knowledge, information
- Data, information
- Information, data
-
- Information, knowledge
- Data, knowledge
- Explicit knowledge has which of the following characteristics?
- objective
- personal
- slow
- costly to transfer
- ambiguous
- Tacit knowledge has which of the following characteristics?
- codified
- objective
- unstructured
- rational
- technical
- Historically, management information systems have focused on capturing, storing, managing, and reporting knowledge.
- tacit
- explicit
- managerial
- geographical
- cultural
- The most important benefit of knowledge management systems is:
- improved customer service.
- they make best practices available to employees.
- retention of scarce knowledge if employees retire.
- improved morale.
- more efficient product development.
- Refer to IT’s About Business 4.3. The major problem associated with CNA’s Knowledge Network is which of the following?
- It is difficult to quantify the benefits of the new system.
- The new system is not being used by enough employees to be of value to the organization.
- Company experts are reluctant to provide their expertise to other employees.
- The new system is too slow to be of value.
- The new system is too costly for its intended benefits.
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