AIS 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Internal Information flows that are used primarily at the operations level to capture transaction and operations data​

A

Horizontal flows of information

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2
Q

Vertical flows of information​ : instructions, quotas, and budgets​

A

downward flows

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3
Q

Vertical flows of information​: aggregated transaction and operations data​

A

upward flows

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4
Q

is a business resource that:​

needs to be appropriately managed​

is vital to the survival of contemporary businesses​

A

Information

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5
Q

A group of interrelated multiple components or subsystems that serve a common purpose​

A

System

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6
Q

is called a subsystem when it is viewed as a component of a larger system.​

A

System

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7
Q

is considered a system when it is the focus of attention.​

A

subsystem

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8
Q

the process of dividing the system into smaller subsystem parts​

A

System Decomposition ​

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9
Q

distinct parts are not self-contained ​

they are reliant upon the functioning of the other parts of the system ​

all distinct parts must be functioning or the system will fail​

A

System Interdependency ​

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10
Q

is the set of formal procedures by which data are collected, processed into information, and distributed to users.​

A

Information System

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11
Q

is a business event

A

transaction

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12
Q

economic events that affect the assets and equities of the organization ​

e.g., purchase of an airline ticket​

A

Financial transactions ​

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12
Q

all other events processed by the organization’s information system ​

e.g., an airline reservation — no commitment by the customer​

A

Nonfinancial transactions​

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13
Q

Accounting an information system.​

It identifies, collects, processes, and communicates economic information about a firm using a wide variety of technologies.​

A

Accounting Information Systems

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14
Q

It captures and records the financial effects of the firm’s transactions.​

It distributes transaction information to operations personnel to coordinate many key tasks.​

A

Accounting Information Systems

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15
Q

process ​

financial transactions; e.g., sale of goods ​

and nonfinancial transactions that directly affect the processing of financial transactions; e.g., addition of newly approved vendors​

A

Accounting Information Systems (AIS)

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16
Q

process ​

nonfinancial transactions that are not normally processed by traditional AIS; e.g., tracking customer complaints​

A

Management Information Systems (MIS)

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17
Q

AIS Subsystems that supports daily business operations​

A

Transaction processing system (TPS)​

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18
Q

AIS Subsystems​ that produces financial statements and reports​

A

General Ledger/ Financial Reporting System (GL/FRS)​

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19
Q

AIS Subsystems​ that produces special-purpose reports for internal use​

A

Management Reporting System (MRS

20
Q

are financial transactions that enter the information system from internal and external sources. ​

A

Data sources

21
Q

are the most common source of data for most organizations.​

E.g., sale of goods and services, purchase of inventory, receipt of cash, and disbursement of cash (including payroll).​

A

External financial transactions

22
Q

involve the exchange or movement of resources within the organization. ​

E.g., movement of raw materials into work-in-process (WIP), application of labor and overhead to WIP, transfer of WIP into finished goods inventory, and depreciation of equipment

A

Internal financial transactions

23
Q

Capturing transaction data​

Recording data onto forms​

Validating and editing the data​

A

Data Collection

24
Q

Classifying​
Transcribing​
Sorting​
Batching​
​Merging​
Calculating​
Summarizing​
Comparing​

A

Data Processing​

25
Q

Storing​

Retrieving​

Deleting​

A

Data Management​

26
Q

Compiling​

Arranging​

Formatting​

Presenting​

A

Information Generation​

27
Q

serves a purpose

A

Relevance

28
Q

no older than the time period of the action it supports​

A

Timeliness

29
Q

free from material errors​

A

Accuracy

30
Q

all information essential to a decision or task is present​

A

Completeness:

31
Q

aggregated in accordance with the user’s needs​

A

Summarization

32
Q

____________by business function is a very common method of organizing.​

A

Segmenting

33
Q

purchasing, receiving and stores​

A

Inventory/Materials Management

34
Q

production planning, quality control, and maintenance​

A

Production

35
Q

excessive storage costs of paper documents and/or magnetic form​

A

Data Storage

36
Q

potential problem of failing to update all affected files​

A

Currency of Information

37
Q

changes or additions must be performed multiple times​

A

Data Updating

37
Q

user’s inability to obtain additional information as needs change​

A

Task-Data Dependency

38
Q

separate files are difficult to integrate across multiple users​

A

Data Integration

39
Q

s an accounting framework for modeling an organization’s ​

economic resources; e.g., assets ​

economic events; i.e., affect changes in resources​

economic agents; i.e., individuals and departments that participate in an economic event ​

Interrelationships among resources, events and agents ​

A

REA model

40
Q

are often used to model these (REA) relationships.​

A

Entity-relationship diagrams (ERD)

41
Q

The accounting function is responsible for the

A

conceptual system

42
Q

while the computer function is responsible for the

A

physical system.

43
Q

determines the nature of the information required, its sources, its destination, and the accounting rules that must be applied. ​

A

conceptual system

44
Q

attest to fairness of financial statements​

assurance service: broader in scope than traditional attestation audit​

A

External Auditors​

45
Q

evaluate IT, often as part of external audit​

A

IT Auditors​

46
Q

in-house IS and IT appraisal services​

A

Internal Auditors​

47
Q
A