Accounting Information Systems and the Accountant
True-False Questions
1. The acronym AIS stands for “Accounting Information Standards.”
2. Accounting information systems must be computerized to be effective.
3. It is best to view an AIS as an accounting system that must be computerized.
4. AISs often create information that is useful to non-accountants.
5. In order to be useful, raw accounting data must be processed by a computer.
6. The path that data follow in an AIS, for example from manual source document to completed output report, is called an audit trail.
7. A company's audit trail is normally easier to follow under a manual data processing system compared to a computerized information processing system.
8. The starting point for an audit trail of a payroll system might be an employee time card.
9. The starting point for an audit trail of a production department might be the purchase of raw materials.
10. The acronym ERP stands for “electronic reporting plan.”
11. The term information overload refers to providing too much data to management, often resulting in managers ignoring it.
12. An advantage of computerized AISs is that they do not need to be programmed to catch simple input errors such as entering “4.0” instead of “40.0” for hours worked in a payroll application.
13. Computers tend to make audit trails easier to follow because everything is computerized.
14. The acronym ERP stands for “enterprise reporting system.”
15. The authors consider accountants to be “knowledge workers.”
16. Predictive analytics use large data warehouses to help organizations improve performance.
17. As used in this chapter, the acronym SAR stands for “suspicious accounting reports.”
18. Sections of the Patriot Act mandate suspicious activity reporting.
19. One of the motivations for SAR is to identify money laundering activities.
20. The term “Patriot” is an acronym for “providing appropriate tools required to intercept and