Given what we know, we can confirm that monitoring performance to ensure that day-to-day goals are being implemented and taking corrective action as needed is known as operational control.
<h3>What is operational control?</h3>
- This type of control was explained in the question itself, some additional information is that it is a form of management.
- The <u>operational control</u> is a form of first-line management.
- It entails having the authority to make changes to a process in order to ensure day-to-day goals are met.
Therefore, we can confirm that that monitoring performance to ensure that day-to-day goals are being implemented and taking corrective action as needed is known as operational control.
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Nanotechnology offers the means to target chemotherapies directly and selectively to cancerous cells and neoplasms, guide in surgical resection of tumors, and enhance the therapeutic efficacy of radiation-based and other current treatment modalities.
Ontonic Pressure, or colloid osmotic pressure, is a form of osmotic pressure exerted by proteins, notably albumin, in a blood vessel's plasma (blood/liquid) that usually tends to pull water into the circulatory system. It is the opposing force to hydrostatic pressure.
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1. Similarities:
they are both processes of cell division by which cells reproduce.
They share several steps of the process(prophase, metaphase, anaphase e telophase, cytokinesis) but meiosis has another division also with those same steps.
In both cases the cell duplicates its DNA by pulling it
apart into two sets, place the sets on each end of the cell, and then
divide down the middle.
Both produce new cells
based on their parent cells' genes.
2. The differences:
Mitosis:
- has 1 division per cycle
- one cell produces 2 new cells
- the genetic information in the mother-cell and the daughter-cells are the same. ( the number of chromosomes is also the same)
- it occurs in somatic cells
Meiosis:
- two divisions per cycle.
- one cell when divides produces 4 new cells
- the new cells have different genetic information. mixes the the genetic material from the
parent cells
- the number of chromosomes of the daughter cells is half of the mother's.
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is option A. The <span>type of mutation that would convert a proto-oncogene into an oncogene would be </span><span>a deletion of most of the proto-oncogene coding sequence. Hope this answers the question. Have a nice day.</span>