CHAPTER 1
THE INFORMATION SYSTEM: AN ACCOUNTANT’S PERSPECTIVE
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Operational, operations management, middle management, and top management.
Horizontal flows support operation-level tasks. The information is highly detailed
about the day-to-day operations. Vertical flows distribute summarized information to
managers at all levels, and this information flows upward. Instructions, quotas, and
budgets also flow downward.
2. Data are facts that are collected in a “raw” form and made meaningful through
processes such as sorting, aggregating, classifying, mathematically manipulating,
and summarizing. The meaningful data is considered to be information.
3. AISs process financial transactions and certain nonfinancial transactions that directly
affect the processing financial transactions. The external financial reporting
documents of AIS are subject to legal and professional standards. Consequently,
management and accountants have greater legal responsibility for AIS applications
than for MIS applications. The MIS processes nonfinancial transactions that are
outside the scope of the AIS. MIS applications expand the information set provided
to such areas as production, sales, marketing, and inventory management. MIS
often draws from and builds on data from the AIS.
4. Revenue cycle, expenditure cycle, and conversion cycle.
5. Reports used by management, which the company is not obligated by law,
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