0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views

MIS Unit 2

The ppt of management information systems

Uploaded by

Prince Katiyar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views

MIS Unit 2

The ppt of management information systems

Uploaded by

Prince Katiyar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 39

UNIT-2

• Transaction Processing System


• Management Information System
• Executive Support System
• Decision Support System
• Expert Systems
Levels of IS

• There are three major levels of IS


• They are:
• TPS: Transaction Processing System
• MIS: Management Information System
• ESS: Executive Support System
• There are others:
• Knowledge Works System
• Decision Support System (See figure-1 &2)
Transaction Processing System

• Transaction Processing System (TPS)


• is a type of information system
• that collects, stores, modifies & retrieves(re checks)
the data transactions of an enterprise
• TPS can be said to be:
• a set of information which process
• the data transaction in database system
• that monitors transaction programs
TPS (cont)

• Used by lower most level in an organisation


• Eg Store personnel for inventory control, customer
billing in retail center (salesmen for sales order entry)
• Deal with pre-defined & structured decisions
• Eg: Discount given based on value of sales
• Decisions are of routine nature
• Deal with day to day affairs of a business
TPS (cont)

• Must be online and current


• Must be updated instantaneously to reveal actual
status at any point of time
• Eg: Hotel or airline reservation system to show seat
availability to enable future booking
• Eg: Sales order entry to show stock position to
enable fulfilling another order
• Link with external environment
TPS (cont)

• Must be detailed and accurate


• Eg: when a loan is sanctioned, TPS details the
category of loan
• Is it vehicle loan, education loan, house building loan,
or personal loan
• Detail like amount, time period, rate of interest, EMI
etc are all generated for each category of loan
Management Information System

• An MIS provides managers with information


and support for effective decision making, and
provides feedback on daily operations
• Output reports are generated by accumulating
data from TPS
• Each MIS is an integrated collection of
subsystems, which are organized along
functional lines within an organization
MIS(CONT)

• Used for generating reports


• Reports are essential for analyzing different
aspects of business
• Eg: inventory status reports, financial
statements, performance reports
• Help to answer 'what-if' questions
• Eg: what would be the effect on cash flows if
the credit term is changed for its customers
Output Reports

• These are the output reports generated by MIS:


• Scheduled reports
• Produced periodically, or on a schedule (daily, weekly,
monthly)
• Key-indicator report
• Summarizes the previous day’s critical activities
• Typically available at the beginning of each day
• Demand report
• Gives certain information at a manager’s request
• Exception report
• Automatically produced when a situation is unusual or
requires management action
MIS (cont)

• Each MIS is an integrated collection of subsystems, which


are organized along functional lines within an
organization
• They are functional information systems
• As each support particular functional areas
• Functional MIS are:
• Human Resources MIS
• Operational MIS
• Marketing MIS
• Financial MIS
MIS (cont)

• These are by middle level of managers


• For the functional heads
• Used for monitoring & controlling activities
• The relate to the past events
• They are generated (activated) periodically
MIS (cont)

• Eg: last quarter or last month


• They are “batched” in months or quarter
• Eg How sales have been for the last three quarters
• This helps us ascertain whether sales has increased
or decreased
MIS (cont)

• They are in the form of summary reports


• Eg: In case of loan sanctioned
• Summary detail of (in a quarter)
• ‘Total vehicle loan’
• ‘Total personal loan’
• ‘Total educational loan’
• ‘Total house building loan’
Difference b/t TPS & MIS

TPS MIS
• Current • Past
• Detailed • Summary
• Structured • Less structured
• Daily • Monthly/Quarterly
• External • Internal
• Online • Not so
• Predefined • Not so
• Instantaneous • Not so (batched)
Executive Support System

• Used by senior management: CEO,BOD, MD


• Deals with long term & strategic issues
• Helps answer queries like:
• What business are we in?
• Where would we like to go?
• Deals with non-programmed & unstructured
decisions
Executive Support System

• Match with changes in business environment


• Eg: Subsidy for setting plant in a state (HP)
• Eg: Air India & Indian Airlines merger? What should
Sahara-Jet do?
• Or a Monster.com taking over Jobsahead.com
• What should Naukri.com do?
• Information are presented using graphs (trends)
Decision Support System

• Any system that supports a decision is a DSS


• It is an organised collection of people, procedure,
software, databases, and devices that support
problem-specific decision making
• The focus is on making effective decisions
• They are custom built for specific applications
• Deal with non routine & adhoc decisions
• Highly interactive & highly analytical in nature

DSS (cont)

• Uses models
• “What if” analysis
• Eg: If sales is doubled; what would be the impact
• On production schedule
• On raw material supply
• On labour working hours
• Only three parameters; therefore cannot answer
anything beyond these three relationships
DSS (cont)

• Eg: If supplier base is reduced


• What would be the impact on:
• Quality of raw material
• Vendor performance
• Delivery time
• Price offered
• Reliability
DSS (cont)

• Components of DSS are:


• Database, model base & interactive software
• DSS can be defines as:
• An integrated system that combine data, models, and
interactive user friendly software into a single powerful
system under user control from inception to implementation
and use
DSS & ESS

• Similarity
• Both deal with unstructured & non programmed
decisions
• Differences:
• DSS has specific objectives & specific solution
• For ESS the objectives are different in different
periods of time
• And solutions are also different
Difference: MIS & DSS

DSS MIS
• Top mgt decision making • Middle level
• Unstructured decisions • Less structured
• Decision focus • Information focus
• Flexible, adaptive & quick • Fixed pattern
response • ---------------------
• Future needs • Past oriented
• Action oriented • Batch oriented
• Instantaneous • Periodic
• Custom built, high analytical skill, • Not so
interactive
DIAGRAM

• Relationship: TPS, MIS, ESS,DSS


Expert System

• These are computer programs that mimic the behavior of


human expertise
• Wide usage in scientific fields:
• Geological survey, oil exploration, medical science but limited
use in management
• Eg: MYCIN-bacterial infection in blood & meningitis
• Stanford University in early 70s
History

• Development in expert systems have grown from researches in


Artificial Intelligence which provide information on how to
analyse problems and develop search strategy in solving them
• AI-in which computer systems take on the characteristics of
human intelligence
• The stages of development were:
• 1. Natural Language Processing
• 2. Robotics
• 3. Expert Systems
Natural Language Processing

• They refer to design and development of computer


programs
• That understand & respond in languages used by
humans
• They respond to commands using these languages
• High level languages:
• COBOL-common business oriented language
• FORTRAN-formula translation
Robotics

• They refer to visual (sight) and tactile (touch) programs that


allow robots to note changes in the environment and take
appropriate action
• They do the complex, dangerous, boring, routine tasks
• They do the manual work
• They do the three ‘Ds’-dull, dirty, dangerous
• Eg: welding car frames, assembling computer systems
Expert Systems

• Refer to design of computer systems that use symbolic


knowledge to simulate behavior of human experts
• Expert System: knowledge intensive program (s/w) that solve
a problem that require human expertise
• They capture & use wisdom of human expert
• Years of experience, specific skills is not lost
• If human expert dies, retires, or leaves orgn
• Critical feature: It can replace a human being
Examples

• Eg: MYCIN develop by Stanford Univ in 70s


• Bacterial infection in blood or meningitis
• KnIFE-Knowledge &Information Fusion Exchange
• Helps soldiers in US make better military decision
• DENDRAL-Used to identify the structure of chemical
compounds (First used in 1965)
• PROSPECTOR-Used by geologists to identify sites for
drilling or mining
Features

• Incomplete or Uncertain Information: It works with uncertain


information
• Inference Strategy: Use an inference strategy in a given
problem situation that a human expert working in a similar
problem would use
• Consultation: Human experts consult others to solve a
problem
• It is designed to ask questions
• And also explain reasoning why
Components

• It has three components:


1. The Knowledge base-which consists of
• Facts, Procedural Rules, & Heuristics
2. Inference Engine
3. User Interface
• It stores all relevant information, data, rules, cases, &
relationship that an expert system uses
• Eg: A medical expert would contain facts about symptom and
diseases
Knowledge Base

• Facts: Statements that associate elements of subject domain


with truth values
• Eg: for MYCIN facts are age, sex
• For loan sanction for a company, EPS, dividend
• Procedural Rules: Well defined sequence of action or rules
pertaining to an event in a specific domain
• Heuristics: Private rules of judgement (hunch)
Inference Engine

• This accesses the knowledge base and uses the knowledge


stored therein and also uses the search and reasoning strategy
stored within itself to arrive at a solution
• User Interface: A program for communicating with the user
• This has also an ‘explanation subsystem’ that explains the
reasoning process (if requested)
• Also used for ‘updation’ of Knowledge Base
Types

• Assistant
• This is the Lowest level
• Helps decision maker by doing routine analysis
• And pointing out those portion of work where human
expertise is required
• Eg Robotics doing the tedious work while the human thinks
Components (cont)

• Colleague
• This is the Second level
• User discuss problem till joint decision is made
• Works in consultation
• True Expert
• This is the Third level
• Advices user without questions (consultation)
Methods Used

•The methods used to develop Experts Systems:


1. Decision Trees
2. Forward Chaining
3. Backward Chaining
4. Case Based Reasoning

Decision trees :
•A tree is formed with the series of questions & responses
•Where the answer is taken from the responses generated
•According to the scenario as end point

Forward chaining :
•This is said to be data-driven
•A method of reasoning that starts with the facts
•And works forward to the conclusions
Methods Used

Back ward chaining:


• This is said to be goal-driven
• A method of reasoning that starts with conclusions and works
backward to the supporting facts
Case based reasoning :
• Cases or instances of the problem, with solution that was
found in a result that took place earlier
• Rather than creating a set of rules, one can write an inference
Engine
Participants

• Participants in developing & using expert system are:


• 1. Domain Expert: Person or group with the expertise or
knowledge the expert system is trying to capture
• 2. Knowledge Engineer: Person who is trained (experienced)
in design, development, implementation & maintenance of an
expert system
• 3. Knowledge User: Person or group who uses or benefits
from an expert system
• They do not need any previous experience or training in
computers or expert system
Application in Mgt

• Application in Management Science:


There is scanty use in management
1.Scepticism: Mgrs can do better than machines or s/w
2.Wait & See Attitude
3.Success stories not publicised
4.Frequent changes in management
5.Updation Cost very high
LANGUAGES USED
• LISP: List Processing
• PROLOG: Programming in Logic

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy