Deck 8: Decision Making and Creative Problem Solving

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Question
As long as people differ in terms of backgrounds, perceptions, aspirations, and values, there will be disagreement over what is right or wrong, and ethical and unethical.
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Question
Subjective probabilities are derived mathematically from reliable historical data.
Question
Given the emphasis on quality improvement, the pace of decision making has slowed.
Question
As the degree of uncertainty increases, decision confidence tends to decline.
Question
When a manager has no doubt about the factual basis of a decision and its outcomes, in other words, the manager has complete and reliable information, a condition of risk exists.
Question
Seeking interdisciplinary input in decision making is a time-consuming process.
Question
When making decisions, the act of choosing implies that alternative courses of action must be weighed and weeded out.
Question
Managers must have complete and reliable information to cope with risk.
Question
A single manager is typically responsible for a given decision from beginning to end.
Question
When making a decision, a number of often-conflicting criteria representing the interests of different groups must be satisfied.
Question
The idea of comparing decision making to floating in a stream helps people understand that organizational decision making is a smooth-flowing and orderly process.
Question
By definition, decision making is the process of understanding uncertainty.
Question
Two basic types of probabilities are objective and subjective.
Question
Given the accelerated pace of change in today's business environment, identifying stakeholders and balancing their conflicting interests is no longer important for decision makers.
Question
A part of organizational decision making today involves intangibles, such as customer goodwill.
Question
As Boeing learned the hard way, outsourcing is not universally good.
Question
Boeing's outsourcing disaster stemmed from the fact that they did not fully understand the conditions required for success and they did not recognize the high level of complexity involved with integrating disparate subcomponents.
Question
When little or no reliable factual information is available, a condition of uncertainty exists.
Question
Unintended consequences and long-term impacts of managers' decisions should be ignored.
Question
Managers with a "thinking" information-processing style are more logical than those with an "intuitive" style.
Question
When making programmed decisions, "if-then" decision rules are often used.
Question
Prejudice and bigotry thrive on framing error.
Question
Knowledge management software has proved very useful and cost-effective in large organizations for sharing both explicit and tacit knowledge.
Question
Escalation of commitment involves throwing good money after bad.
Question
The decision-making error of overconfidence is represented by the argument of "too much time and money invested to quit now."
Question
The first step in the general decision-making model is determining whether this is a routine decision.
Question
Being overconfident can lead managers to take unreasonable risks.
Question
The "thinking" style of information processing tends to prevail in traditional pyramid work organizations.
Question
Given high levels of uncertainty and accelerated pace of change, most decisions made by the typical manager on a daily basis are of the nonprogrammed variety.
Question
Knowledge management is defined as the development of tools, processes, systems, structures, and cultures to improve the creation, sharing, and use of knowledge critical for decision making.
Question
Having employees with "thinking" and "intuitive" information-processing styles on the same committee is counterproductive.
Question
Nonprogrammed decisions are more common in today's businesses than programmed decisions.
Question
To avoid escalation of commitment, managers should compare actual progress with goals and timetables to conduct reality checks.
Question
The flow of constructive tacit knowledge between coworkers is a top priority of knowledge management.
Question
Deciding whether to merge with another company is an example of a nonprogrammed decision.
Question
Bonnie, Reitz, a senior vice president for sales at Continental Airlines is an example of a highly effective manager who embraces both the thinking style and the intuitive style.
Question
There are two types of knowledge: implicit knowledge and strategic knowledge.
Question
Programmed decisions are repetitive and routine.
Question
One way to sharpen your intuition is to use imagery.
Question
According to on-the-job research, managers do not necessarily follow a logical sequence of steps when making decisions.
Question
According to Peter Drucker, emphasis on finding the right questions, rather than the right answers, is the most common source of mistakes in management decisions.
Question
Forgetting how to play can stifle creativity.
Question
An advantage of group-aided decision making is "logrolling."
Question
According to a recent survey, groupware is typically plagued by low quality implementation.
Question
"Discovery" is the most relevant domain of creativity to management.
Question
Groupware is also known as collaborative computing.
Question
Humor is one of the three domains of creativity.
Question
The two domains of creativity are inspiration and application.
Question
The most common problem-solving difficulty lies in the identification of problems.
Question
One of the mental locks on creativity is "Always trying to be logical."
Question
Most daily problem solving is done on a haphazard, intuitive basis.
Question
A group should always make decisions with legal ramifications.
Question
One of the most common mental locks to creativity is overlooking logic and relying on ambiguity and contradictions.
Question
The main advantage of group involvement in decision making is that the group actually makes the final decision.
Question
To be called creative, something must be a radical departure from the past.
Question
The beginning of the four-step problem-solving process is identifying the problem.
Question
Groupthink is a potential disadvantage of group-aided decision making.
Question
Creativity is an inborn trait; it cannot be learned.
Question
According to recent field research, creative people are extreme nonconformists.
Question
Creative work is not necessarily the result of creative self-expression through unconventional dress and strange behavior.
Question
The creative leap approach to creativity involves listing of ideal characteristics of a given object.
Question
When an original situation is changed so that a problem no longer exists, the problem has been dissolved.
Question
Which one of the eight sources of decision complexity is likely to create conflict over ethical issues?

A) Interdisciplinary input
B) Risk and uncertainty
C) Intangibles
D) Value judgments
E) Long-term implications
Question
What is the meaning of the analogy of decision making is like floating in a stream?

A) The decision maker is a swimmer going upstream
B) Information flows in a smooth and steady order
C) Information flows in random order and it doesn't stop
D) Solutions are the boats
E) Decisions are the bridges
Question
The key to successful brainstorming is throwing out bad ideas right from the beginning.
Question
By definition, decision making involves

A) choosing.
B) leadership.
C) eliminating uncertainty.
D) worry.
E) fear.
Question
A problem is defined as any sort of deficiency.
Question
____ is(are) not one of the contributors to decision complexity covered in the text.

A) Long-term implications
B) Risk and uncertainty
C) Government regulation
D) Multiple criteria
E) Interdisciplinary input
Question
Which of these is a contributor to decision complexity, according to the author?

A) Culture
B) Politics
C) Leadership
D) Interdisciplinary input
E) Government regulation
Question
Managers are said to "idealize" when they systematically research alternative solutions and select the one with the best combination of benefits through scientific observation and quantitative measurement.
Question
Marjorie is the manager of a small, family-owned restaurant. Increasingly, she has had to diversify her menu to cater to customers' nutritional and dietary requirements. Which source of decision complexity is Marjorie facing?

A) Intangibles
B) Risk and uncertainty
C) Long-term implications
D) Multiple criteria
E) Interdisciplinary input
Question
According to the author, ____ is not a tough challenge decision makers must face today.

A) second-guessing by others
B) information-processing styles
C) uncertainty
D) complex streams of decisions
E) perceptual and behavioral decision traps
Question
Managers are said to be "satisficing" if they select a solution to a problem that is "good enough."
Question
One of the most important lessons learned from Boeing's outsourcing of the design and build of the airplane sections for the 787 Dreamliner is that __________________________.

A) outsourcing is universally good.
B) outsourcing design and build is not ideal to use when the product requires complex integration of disparate subcomponents.
C) outsourcing should never be used with the "build-to-print" model calling for suppliers to receive confidential blueprints.
D) outsourcing is a proven model for always saving companies time and money.
E) outsourcing is never good.
Question
According to the eight sources of decision complexity, managers must cope with ____ criteria and ____ decision making.

A) subjective; programmed
B) vague; high-level
C) intangible; individual
D) vague; rapid
E) multiple; pooled
Question
Boeing, the world's largest airplane manufacturer, outsourced the design and build of airplane sections for the 787 Dreamliner rather use the old "build-to-print". This new program, designed to reduce assembly time to one-tenth the normal time was a _____________.

A) huge success.
B) substantial time and money saver.
C) disaster.
D) historical milestone in go-to-market assembly.
E) strategic success because of the comprehensive understanding of the conditions.
Question
The Edisonian approach is a creativity technique involving trial-and-error experimentation.
Question
A creativity technique that involves thinking up an idealistic solution is the scientific method.
Question
Diagnosing problems in terms of their symptoms is a stumbling block for problem finders.
Question
The "head" of a fishbone diagram represents the cause(s) of the problem while the "bones" provide a description of the problem.
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Deck 8: Decision Making and Creative Problem Solving
1
As long as people differ in terms of backgrounds, perceptions, aspirations, and values, there will be disagreement over what is right or wrong, and ethical and unethical.
True
2
Subjective probabilities are derived mathematically from reliable historical data.
False
3
Given the emphasis on quality improvement, the pace of decision making has slowed.
False
4
As the degree of uncertainty increases, decision confidence tends to decline.
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k this deck
5
When a manager has no doubt about the factual basis of a decision and its outcomes, in other words, the manager has complete and reliable information, a condition of risk exists.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Seeking interdisciplinary input in decision making is a time-consuming process.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
7
When making decisions, the act of choosing implies that alternative courses of action must be weighed and weeded out.
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k this deck
8
Managers must have complete and reliable information to cope with risk.
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k this deck
9
A single manager is typically responsible for a given decision from beginning to end.
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10
When making a decision, a number of often-conflicting criteria representing the interests of different groups must be satisfied.
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k this deck
11
The idea of comparing decision making to floating in a stream helps people understand that organizational decision making is a smooth-flowing and orderly process.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
By definition, decision making is the process of understanding uncertainty.
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13
Two basic types of probabilities are objective and subjective.
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14
Given the accelerated pace of change in today's business environment, identifying stakeholders and balancing their conflicting interests is no longer important for decision makers.
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k this deck
15
A part of organizational decision making today involves intangibles, such as customer goodwill.
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k this deck
16
As Boeing learned the hard way, outsourcing is not universally good.
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17
Boeing's outsourcing disaster stemmed from the fact that they did not fully understand the conditions required for success and they did not recognize the high level of complexity involved with integrating disparate subcomponents.
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18
When little or no reliable factual information is available, a condition of uncertainty exists.
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k this deck
19
Unintended consequences and long-term impacts of managers' decisions should be ignored.
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k this deck
20
Managers with a "thinking" information-processing style are more logical than those with an "intuitive" style.
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k this deck
21
When making programmed decisions, "if-then" decision rules are often used.
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k this deck
22
Prejudice and bigotry thrive on framing error.
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23
Knowledge management software has proved very useful and cost-effective in large organizations for sharing both explicit and tacit knowledge.
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k this deck
24
Escalation of commitment involves throwing good money after bad.
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25
The decision-making error of overconfidence is represented by the argument of "too much time and money invested to quit now."
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k this deck
26
The first step in the general decision-making model is determining whether this is a routine decision.
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k this deck
27
Being overconfident can lead managers to take unreasonable risks.
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k this deck
28
The "thinking" style of information processing tends to prevail in traditional pyramid work organizations.
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k this deck
29
Given high levels of uncertainty and accelerated pace of change, most decisions made by the typical manager on a daily basis are of the nonprogrammed variety.
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k this deck
30
Knowledge management is defined as the development of tools, processes, systems, structures, and cultures to improve the creation, sharing, and use of knowledge critical for decision making.
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Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
31
Having employees with "thinking" and "intuitive" information-processing styles on the same committee is counterproductive.
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k this deck
32
Nonprogrammed decisions are more common in today's businesses than programmed decisions.
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k this deck
33
To avoid escalation of commitment, managers should compare actual progress with goals and timetables to conduct reality checks.
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k this deck
34
The flow of constructive tacit knowledge between coworkers is a top priority of knowledge management.
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k this deck
35
Deciding whether to merge with another company is an example of a nonprogrammed decision.
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k this deck
36
Bonnie, Reitz, a senior vice president for sales at Continental Airlines is an example of a highly effective manager who embraces both the thinking style and the intuitive style.
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k this deck
37
There are two types of knowledge: implicit knowledge and strategic knowledge.
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k this deck
38
Programmed decisions are repetitive and routine.
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39
One way to sharpen your intuition is to use imagery.
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k this deck
40
According to on-the-job research, managers do not necessarily follow a logical sequence of steps when making decisions.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
According to Peter Drucker, emphasis on finding the right questions, rather than the right answers, is the most common source of mistakes in management decisions.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Forgetting how to play can stifle creativity.
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k this deck
43
An advantage of group-aided decision making is "logrolling."
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k this deck
44
According to a recent survey, groupware is typically plagued by low quality implementation.
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k this deck
45
"Discovery" is the most relevant domain of creativity to management.
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k this deck
46
Groupware is also known as collaborative computing.
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k this deck
47
Humor is one of the three domains of creativity.
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k this deck
48
The two domains of creativity are inspiration and application.
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k this deck
49
The most common problem-solving difficulty lies in the identification of problems.
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k this deck
50
One of the mental locks on creativity is "Always trying to be logical."
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k this deck
51
Most daily problem solving is done on a haphazard, intuitive basis.
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k this deck
52
A group should always make decisions with legal ramifications.
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k this deck
53
One of the most common mental locks to creativity is overlooking logic and relying on ambiguity and contradictions.
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k this deck
54
The main advantage of group involvement in decision making is that the group actually makes the final decision.
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k this deck
55
To be called creative, something must be a radical departure from the past.
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k this deck
56
The beginning of the four-step problem-solving process is identifying the problem.
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k this deck
57
Groupthink is a potential disadvantage of group-aided decision making.
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k this deck
58
Creativity is an inborn trait; it cannot be learned.
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k this deck
59
According to recent field research, creative people are extreme nonconformists.
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k this deck
60
Creative work is not necessarily the result of creative self-expression through unconventional dress and strange behavior.
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k this deck
61
The creative leap approach to creativity involves listing of ideal characteristics of a given object.
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k this deck
62
When an original situation is changed so that a problem no longer exists, the problem has been dissolved.
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Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
63
Which one of the eight sources of decision complexity is likely to create conflict over ethical issues?

A) Interdisciplinary input
B) Risk and uncertainty
C) Intangibles
D) Value judgments
E) Long-term implications
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Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
What is the meaning of the analogy of decision making is like floating in a stream?

A) The decision maker is a swimmer going upstream
B) Information flows in a smooth and steady order
C) Information flows in random order and it doesn't stop
D) Solutions are the boats
E) Decisions are the bridges
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
The key to successful brainstorming is throwing out bad ideas right from the beginning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
By definition, decision making involves

A) choosing.
B) leadership.
C) eliminating uncertainty.
D) worry.
E) fear.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
A problem is defined as any sort of deficiency.
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Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
____ is(are) not one of the contributors to decision complexity covered in the text.

A) Long-term implications
B) Risk and uncertainty
C) Government regulation
D) Multiple criteria
E) Interdisciplinary input
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Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Which of these is a contributor to decision complexity, according to the author?

A) Culture
B) Politics
C) Leadership
D) Interdisciplinary input
E) Government regulation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Managers are said to "idealize" when they systematically research alternative solutions and select the one with the best combination of benefits through scientific observation and quantitative measurement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Marjorie is the manager of a small, family-owned restaurant. Increasingly, she has had to diversify her menu to cater to customers' nutritional and dietary requirements. Which source of decision complexity is Marjorie facing?

A) Intangibles
B) Risk and uncertainty
C) Long-term implications
D) Multiple criteria
E) Interdisciplinary input
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
According to the author, ____ is not a tough challenge decision makers must face today.

A) second-guessing by others
B) information-processing styles
C) uncertainty
D) complex streams of decisions
E) perceptual and behavioral decision traps
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Managers are said to be "satisficing" if they select a solution to a problem that is "good enough."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
One of the most important lessons learned from Boeing's outsourcing of the design and build of the airplane sections for the 787 Dreamliner is that __________________________.

A) outsourcing is universally good.
B) outsourcing design and build is not ideal to use when the product requires complex integration of disparate subcomponents.
C) outsourcing should never be used with the "build-to-print" model calling for suppliers to receive confidential blueprints.
D) outsourcing is a proven model for always saving companies time and money.
E) outsourcing is never good.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
According to the eight sources of decision complexity, managers must cope with ____ criteria and ____ decision making.

A) subjective; programmed
B) vague; high-level
C) intangible; individual
D) vague; rapid
E) multiple; pooled
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Boeing, the world's largest airplane manufacturer, outsourced the design and build of airplane sections for the 787 Dreamliner rather use the old "build-to-print". This new program, designed to reduce assembly time to one-tenth the normal time was a _____________.

A) huge success.
B) substantial time and money saver.
C) disaster.
D) historical milestone in go-to-market assembly.
E) strategic success because of the comprehensive understanding of the conditions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
The Edisonian approach is a creativity technique involving trial-and-error experimentation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
A creativity technique that involves thinking up an idealistic solution is the scientific method.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Diagnosing problems in terms of their symptoms is a stumbling block for problem finders.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
The "head" of a fishbone diagram represents the cause(s) of the problem while the "bones" provide a description of the problem.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
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Unlock for access to all 163 flashcards in this deck.