For your second paragraph, see the cellular organelle assigned to you according to your name in the table below. Answer the following questions for your assigned organelle or cellular structure (my assigned cellular organelle is Ribosome) What is the main function of your cellular organelle? What types of cells in the human body contain large amounts of your organelle? If your organelle was damaged, what cellular process would be disrupted? What might happen to the cell as a consequence of damage to your organelle and disruption of that cellular process? Come up with an analogy for your organelle to relate its function to something in real life. Explain the reasoning behind your analogy. For example, DNA might be considered a recipe book, since it contains the instructions to make all the components of cells.
In: Biology
Which of the following is not a "false" statement in economics?
Question 3 options:
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Scarcity means that the available economic (limited) resources are enough to produce the goods and services necessary to satisfy all of the unlimited human wants. |
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The production possibility frontier (PPF) for an economy illustrates the different combinations between two products that an economy can produce when all resources are fully employed, with an unchanged available amounts of resources, and for a level of technology that only advances and never regresses. |
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Points along the country's production possibilities frontier (PPF) are feasible and efficient in the production, while points below the country's PPF are infeasible and inefficient in the production. |
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The low of supply states that, other things being equal for a rational supplier under the normal circumstances, the higher the price of the product, the higher the quantity supplied from that product, and vice versa. |
In: Economics
Please write it clears and neat and follow the question.
Assignment: The city of Cambridge has mandated that employers “shall adopt, implement, and maintain a written smoking policy which shall contain a prohibition against smoking in restrooms and infirmaries.” Employers must also “maintain a nonsmoking area of not less than one-third of the seating capacity in cafeterias, lunchrooms, and employee lounges, and make efforts to work out disputes between smokers and nonsmokers.” Your Task: As Lindsay English, director of Human Resources, write a memo to all department managers of Imperial Foods, a large food products company. Announce the new restriction, and tell the managers that you want them to set up departmental committees to mediate any smoking conflicts before complaints surface. Explain why this is a good policy.
In: Accounting
Energy obtained from REDOX reactions with nitrate (NO3) and glucose is____________ carbon dioxide (CO2) and molecular hydrogen (H2)
a. more than b. less than c. equal to d. there is not information to answerYour family and friends ask you, “Is E. coli a pathogen?” What would you answer? which of the following sentences is not correct
Some E. coli grow normally in the d. human intestine, producing
vitamins,
such as vitamin K
Other strains, such as E. coli O157:H7, e. cause serious illness.
E. coli is a common microorganism there is nothing to be worried about
E. coli, like other microbes can live symbiotically in our gut
Location, location, location. If it stays where it should be no strain of E. coli is a threat (please, explain this question)
In: Biology
If you have ever hiked or climbed to high altitudes in the mountains, you surely have noticed how short of breath you get. This occurs because the air is thinner, so each breath contains fewer O2 molecules than at sea level. At the top of Mt. Everest, the pressure is only 13atm. Air contains 21.0 % O2 and 78.0 % N2, and an average human breath is 0.480 L of air.
Part A) At the top of Mt. Everest, how many O2 molecules does each breath contain when the temperature is -10.0 ∘F?
Express your answer as number of molecules.
Part B) What percent is this of the number of O2 molecules you would get from a breath at sea level at -10.0 ∘F?
Express your answer as a percentage.
In: Physics
3. A cube of Brass (B = 70 GPa) measuring 1.0 m on each side is submerged under water. It is lowerd to a depth where a force "F" is acting perpendicularly into each side, reduces the cube's volume by 1.8 %.
(a) Calculate the size of this force.
2.A researcher examines a piece of fresh human cartilage, with an area of 1.9 cm2. She observes that when subjected to a tensile force of 194 N it stretches by 4.8 %.
(a) Calculate the elastic modulus of cartilage.
1. A student pushes on the end of a helical spring, which in turn presses a 1.25 kg, wooden block onto a vertical wall. The coefficient of static friction between the block and wall is 0.5. She compresses the spring 5.2 cm.
(a) Calculate the minimum spring constant necessaary to prevent the block from sliding down the wall.
In: Physics
Discuss what you think is the most important HPWS (high performance work system) element. Be sure to explain your rationale.
The theory of high performance work systems (HPWS) with four foundation principles are outlined below.
Older Management – Labor Theories and Practices HPWS Principles
Incentive/cost reduction productivity (1930s onward)
Quality and Total Quality theories (1960s onward) Performance-Reward
Empowerment/Engagement Theories (1960s onward)
Motivation/Satisfaction Theories (1930s onward) Egalitarianism
Efficient Operations Workflow theories (1970s onward)
Employee Teams/Autonomous Work (1970s onward) Shared Information
Information/Problem Solving Theories (1980s onward)
Socio-Psychological Theories of Work (1950s onward) Knowledge Development
Human Capital/Strategic Resource Theories (1990s onward)
In: Operations Management
Create a mini debate transcript for this two students:
Imagine this scenario: You are attending a local psychology conference and you find two graduate level psychology students entered in a hot debate, with a crowd of people around them. You are curious and come closer to see what everyone is interested in. You find that they are debating the work and personality of BF Skinner. One of the students, Rick Nilsen claims that Skinner was a cool headed scientist who based his opinions about the human being only on observable behavior. The other student, Blanca Alvarez, says that Skinner was not just as simple as he seemed. He believed in behaviorism, just like other people believed in Marxism or any other –ism. • What points would each one make?
In: Psychology
Create a 1 page mini debate transcript for these two students: Imagine this scenario: You are attending a local psychology conference and you find two graduate level psychology students entered in a hot debate, with a crowd of people around them. You are curious and come closer to see what everyone is interested in. You find that they are debating the work and personality of BF Skinner. One of the students, Rick Nilsen claims that Skinner was a cool headed scientist who based his opinions about the human being only on observable behavior. The other student, Blanca Alvarez, says that Skinner was not just as simple as he seemed. He believed in behaviorism, just like other people believed in Marxism or any other –ism. • What points would each one make?
In: Psychology
Create a 1 page mini debate transcript for these two students:
Imagine this scenario: You are attending a local psychology conference and you find two graduate level psychology students entered in a hot debate, with a crowd of people around them. You are curious and come closer to see what everyone is interested in. You find that they are debating the work and personality of BF Skinner. One of the students, Rick Nilsen claims that Skinner was a cool headed scientist who based his opinions about the human being only on observable behavior. The other student, Blanca Alvarez, says that Skinner was not just as simple as he seemed. He believed in behaviorism, just like other people believed in Marxism or any other –ism. • What points would each one make?
In: Psychology