BUSI 505 /BUSI 505 QUIZ 8. LIBERTY UNIVERSITY.Course BUSI 505
Test Quiz 8
Attempt Score 25 out of 25 points
Instructions • Time limit: 1
... [Show More] hour
• 25 true/false and multiple-choice questions
• Open-book/open-notes
• Do not hit the BACK button as this will lock you out of the quiz.
• The timer will continue if you leave this quiz without submitting it.
Results Displayed Submitted Answers, Feedback
• Question 1
1 out of 1 points
Which two events led to the expansion of the field of nanotechnology?
Selected Answer: a.
Invention of the scanning tunneling microscope and the discovery of fullerenes
Response Feedback: The invention of the scanning tunneling microscope and the discovery of fullerenes were the two events that led to the expansion of the field of nanotechnology.
• Question 2
1 out of 1 points
What is the primary goal of nanomedicine?
Selected Answer: a.
The use of nanotechnology for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease
Response Feedback: The primary purpose of nanomedicine is the use of nanotechnology for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease. The advancement of man through the modification of the human body with nanotechnology; development of nanomaterials used in electronics, structural materials, and commercial products; and creation of materials, devices, and other structures at the nanoscale are not primary purposes of nanomedicine.
• Question 3
1 out of 1 points
Which statement best describes the impact of health informatics on the advantages and disadvantages of nanotechnology?
Selected Answer: d.
Reliable information about the safety of nanomaterials lags behind their fabrication.
Response Feedback: The need for data, information, and knowledge about nanomaterials is related to the quality and availability of comprehensive content on the materials. Nanoinformatics uses biomedical informatics techniques and tools for enhancing the reliable quality and availability of this data and information. Expanding the theory, modeling, and simulation within an informatics infrastructure would offer reliable methods to collect and analyze the different properties of the nanoparticle data as programs have started with the National Cancer Institute with a goal to create an available public database of easily computable nanoparticle data. The remaining options are all correct statements, but their emphasis is less focused on the overall concern, with lack of data and information to gain knowledge and wisdom in the use of nanomaterials.
REF: Pages 624-625 [Show Less]