Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 390 questões.

769416 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Estatística
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Uma determinada empresa tem três diferentes unidades (A, B e C). A tabela abaixo mostra o número de funcionários homens e o número de funcionárias mulheres em cada uma das três unidades:
Homens Mulheres
Unidade A 100 100
Unidade B 40 60
Unidade C 20 80
Com base nessas informações, é correto afirmar:
Item 0 - Suponha que um funcionário dessa empresa escolhido aleatoriamente seja uma mulher. A probabilidade de que essa pessoa trabalhe na unidade B é igual a 25%;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
769289 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Text 2
Pandemic disease
Never again
As the Ebola epidemic draws gradually to its close, how should the world arm itself against the risks of insurgent infections?
Mar 21st 2015 | From the print edition
THE outbreak of Ebola fever brought to the world’s attention on March 22nd 2014 by Médecins Sans Frontières, an international charity, has infected some 25,000 people and killed more than 10,000 of them—almost all in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. It is abating. Liberia is close to declaring itself free of the virus and infection rates are falling in Sierra Leone. But it is not over yet, for in Guinea Ebola still kills dozens of people a week.
Moreover, the aftermath will harm the three countries’ economies, costing at least $1.6 billion in forgone economic growth this year, according to the World Bank.
Though it could have been a lot worse (at the height of the crisis some epidemiologists were talking of hundreds of thousands of deaths) it might also have been a lot better.
Previous Ebola outbreaks killed dozens or hundreds. The whole episode therefore suggests that the world’s defences against epidemics, though they have been strengthened since the rapid spread of SARS in 2002 and 2003 demonstrated their weaknesses, could do with reinforcing still further.
The prime directive of epidemic prevention is early detection. That means good surveillance. Unfortunately, only 64 of the 194 members of the World Health Organisation (WHO) have surveillance procedures, laboratories and data-management capabilities good enough to fulfil their obligations under an agreement known as the International Health Regulations. This, though, is changing. In Africa, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Uganda have sharpened up. So has Vietnam. America is now helping 30 other countries, including the three affected by Ebola, to follow suit while, at the same time, improving their networks of clinics. Groups of neighbours are also coming together to form regional surveillance networks that can follow outbreaks across borders. Researchers in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, for example, have formed what they call the Asian Partnership on Emerging Infectious Diseases Research.
Along with early detection, the world needs to get better at responding—both institutionally and technologically. The WHO, notoriously slow off the mark when it came to Ebola, is widely regarded as too ponderous and bureaucratic to react with the speed needed to nip an emerging epidemic in the bud. There is talk of setting up a specialist international epidemic-prevention organisation. Bill Gates, a philanthropist whose foundation does a lot of work on disease control in poor countries, encourages this idea in this week’s New England Journal of Medicine. He notes that epidemics and war are similarly costly of blood and treasure, but that only war is taken seriously by politicians—at least in terms of preparations such as standing armies. As if to prove the point, the threat of bioterrorism has been one motive for what preparations have been put in place.
An army, of course, needs weapons. And, in the case of epidemics, it is important to think about what those might be. The temptation is to put money into high-profile areas like vaccines and drugs. It may, though, be more useful to concentrate on diagnosis, because this can stop people spreading a disease. The science of diagnostic testing is advancing rapidly, making it easier to come up quickly with a test for a new pathogen. That, Mr Gates believes, presents an opportunity. But it is one, he says, which requires the establishment of a rapid approval and procurement process, so that diagnostic tests can be made available quickly during outbreaks. They also need to be portable, like pregnancy tests, to keep people out of clinics where they might otherwise spread infection.
Drugs and vaccines are still important, of course. Research is going on into ways to make new vaccines quickly, so trials can start within days of an outbreak. Modern biological techniques mean a pathogen’s genome can be copied and stuck into other cells to turn out proteins which might be used as a vaccine’s active ingredients. Once a vaccine has been identified, the same techniques could be used to make it quickly, and possibly locally if a portable factory were shipped to an affected area.
The sinews of war
But none of this rapid response can happen without cash. One lesson of an earlier incident, the H1N1 influenza (“swine flu”) pandemic of 2009, was the lack of a contingency fund to deal with such things. This is a problem Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank, is determined to solve. He has been meeting with politicians and the private sector to advance the case for a “global pandemic emergency financing facility”.
One more modest possibility is that pools of research funding could be set up in advance, along with agreed research protocols, allowing health studies to start more quickly. An existing example of this is a fund created by the Wellcome Trust, a British medical charity.
Even on the coldest of calculations, a contingency fund would be a wise precaution. The damage caused by Ebola to west Africa’s economy is trivial compared with the cost of, say, a global influenza pandemic. The World Bank reckons that might reduce global economic activity by almost 5%. How many would die would depend on the virus’s virulence. But even a 1% death rate, for something that was truly worldwide, would add up to millions. That is too much blood, and too much treasure, for politicians to ignore.
From the print edition: Science and technology
According to the text:
Item 2 - Although important, diagnosis won't stop people spreading a disease;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
769251 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
A questão da fragilidade e crise do balanço de pagamentos é recorrente na economia brasileira, induzindo, às vezes, a mudanças de política econômica. Sobre tal fenômeno podemos afirmar que:
Item 3 - No Governo Café Filho, a Instrução 113 da SUMOC permitiu a importação de equipamentos sem cobertura cambial, mesmo que não estivessem classificados nas três primeiras categorias de importação priorizadas.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
769073 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Estatística
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Considere a seguinte alternativa sobre os estimadores de Mínimos Quadrados Ordinários em um modelo de regressão múltipla:
Item 2 - Se o valor esperado dos erros estimados do modelo for diferente de zero, então os estimadores de todos os parâmetros, inclusive o intercepto, não serão viesados;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
769055 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Estatística
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Considere a seguinte alternativa sobre os estimadores de Mínimos Quadrados Ordinários em um modelo de regressão múltipla:
Item 0 - A presença de colinearidade imperfeita entre as variáveis explicativas gera estimadores viesados;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
768593 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Avalie a proposições seguinte, que dizem respeito à teoria da competição perfeita:
Item 3 - No caso acima, o excedente do consumidor será igual a $1400;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
767298 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Text 2
Pandemic disease
Never again
As the Ebola epidemic draws gradually to its close, how should the world arm itself against the risks of insurgent infections?
Mar 21st 2015 | From the print edition
THE outbreak of Ebola fever brought to the world’s attention on March 22nd 2014 by Médecins Sans Frontières, an international charity, has infected some 25,000 people and killed more than 10,000 of them—almost all in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. It is abating. Liberia is close to declaring itself free of the virus and infection rates are falling in Sierra Leone. But it is not over yet, for in Guinea Ebola still kills dozens of people a week.
Moreover, the aftermath will harm the three countries’ economies, costing at least $1.6 billion in forgone economic growth this year, according to the World Bank.
Though it could have been a lot worse (at the height of the crisis some epidemiologists were talking of hundreds of thousands of deaths) it might also have been a lot better.
Previous Ebola outbreaks killed dozens or hundreds. The whole episode therefore suggests that the world’s defences against epidemics, though they have been strengthened since the rapid spread of SARS in 2002 and 2003 demonstrated their weaknesses, could do with reinforcing still further.
The prime directive of epidemic prevention is early detection. That means good surveillance. Unfortunately, only 64 of the 194 members of the World Health Organisation (WHO) have surveillance procedures, laboratories and data-management capabilities good enough to fulfil their obligations under an agreement known as the International Health Regulations. This, though, is changing. In Africa, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Uganda have sharpened up. So has Vietnam. America is now helping 30 other countries, including the three affected by Ebola, to follow suit while, at the same time, improving their networks of clinics. Groups of neighbours are also coming together to form regional surveillance networks that can follow outbreaks across borders. Researchers in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, for example, have formed what they call the Asian Partnership on Emerging Infectious Diseases Research.
Along with early detection, the world needs to get better at responding—both institutionally and technologically. The WHO, notoriously slow off the mark when it came to Ebola, is widely regarded as too ponderous and bureaucratic to react with the speed needed to nip an emerging epidemic in the bud. There is talk of setting up a specialist international epidemic-prevention organisation. Bill Gates, a philanthropist whose foundation does a lot of work on disease control in poor countries, encourages this idea in this week’s New England Journal of Medicine. He notes that epidemics and war are similarly costly of blood and treasure, but that only war is taken seriously by politicians—at least in terms of preparations such as standing armies. As if to prove the point, the threat of bioterrorism has been one motive for what preparations have been put in place.
An army, of course, needs weapons. And, in the case of epidemics, it is important to think about what those might be. The temptation is to put money into high-profile areas like vaccines and drugs. It may, though, be more useful to concentrate on diagnosis, because this can stop people spreading a disease. The science of diagnostic testing is advancing rapidly, making it easier to come up quickly with a test for a new pathogen. That, Mr Gates believes, presents an opportunity. But it is one, he says, which requires the establishment of a rapid approval and procurement process, so that diagnostic tests can be made available quickly during outbreaks. They also need to be portable, like pregnancy tests, to keep people out of clinics where they might otherwise spread infection.
Drugs and vaccines are still important, of course. Research is going on into ways to make new vaccines quickly, so trials can start within days of an outbreak. Modern biological techniques mean a pathogen’s genome can be copied and stuck into other cells to turn out proteins which might be used as a vaccine’s active ingredients. Once a vaccine has been identified, the same techniques could be used to make it quickly, and possibly locally if a portable factory were shipped to an affected area.
The sinews of war
But none of this rapid response can happen without cash. One lesson of an earlier incident, the H1N1 influenza (“swine flu”) pandemic of 2009, was the lack of a contingency fund to deal with such things. This is a problem Jim Yong Kim, president of the World Bank, is determined to solve. He has been meeting with politicians and the private sector to advance the case for a “global pandemic emergency financing facility”.
One more modest possibility is that pools of research funding could be set up in advance, along with agreed research protocols, allowing health studies to start more quickly. An existing example of this is a fund created by the Wellcome Trust, a British medical charity.
Even on the coldest of calculations, a contingency fund would be a wise precaution. The damage caused by Ebola to west Africa’s economy is trivial compared with the cost of, say, a global influenza pandemic. The World Bank reckons that might reduce global economic activity by almost 5%. How many would die would depend on the virus’s virulence. But even a 1% death rate, for something that was truly worldwide, would add up to millions. That is too much blood, and too much treasure, for politicians to ignore.
From the print edition: Science and technology
We can infer from the text that:
Item 2 - Bill Gates has never written for the “New England Journal of Medicine”;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
767287 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Matemática
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Considere o problema de maximizar !$ f(x, \, y) \, = \, ax \, + \, y !$ com !$ a \, > \, 0 !$, sujeito às restrições: !$ x \, + \, y \, -5 \, \le \, 0, \, y \, \le \, 2 !$. Julgue a seguinte afirmativa:
Item 4 - Se no item anterior tivermos !$ 0 \, < \, b \, < \, a \, < \, 1 !$, então a solução seria !$ (x, \, y) \, = \, ( { \large 5 \over b}, \, 0). !$
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
767187 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Matemática
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Uma matriz de permutação é uma matriz quadrada, cujas entradas são números 0 ou 1 e tal que em cada linha e em cada coluna há exatamente um número 1. Analise a alternativa da seguinte afirmações:
Item 3 - Seja !$ M \, \epsilon \, R^{nxn} !$ uma matriz de permutação e !$ S \, = \, \{ [v_1...v_n]^r \, \epsilon \, R^{n \, x \,1} \, \mid \, \textstyle \sum_{i = 1}^N \, v_1 \, = \, 1 \}. !$ A
transformação linear T(v) = Mv deixa invariante o conjunto S (ou seja, T(S) !$ ⊂ !$ S );
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
767177 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
A Constituição de 1988 estabeleceu mudanças institucionais que impactaram na economia brasileira. Dentre tais mudanças pode-se arrolar:
Item 3 - Aumento do controle do Governo Federal sobre os recursos arrecadados.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas