For each of the following questions, select the best answer according to this chapter of Power Tools for Technical Communication, and then press Check answers. Which of the following best explains what the term illustrative graphic refers to, as it is used in Chapter 11? Tables, charts, and graphs Photographs, drawings, diagrams Photographs, drawings, diagrams, tables, charts, and graphs Chapter 11 encourages you to use cross-references in relation to graphics. Which of the following best explains how cross-references work and why they are useful? They point readers to a graphic and orient them to that graphic by explaining it to them. They take the place of the graphic for situations in which you the writer are not equipped to include graphics in a document. They are the words and phrases that point to specific parts of the graphic and provide names for those parts. Which of the following best explains which type of illustrative graphic provides the least amount of realistic, illustrative detail? Photograph: the detail is too blurry. Diagram: only outlines are shown. Schematic: only things like circuits are shown; you can't tell what the object is. Diagram: only things like circuits are shown; you can't tell what the object is. Schematic: only outlines are shown. When you copy all or part of what is displayed on a computer screen, which of the following is that action called? Sizing Cropping Rasterizing Flattening Screen capturing When you select a segment of an existing graphic, which of the following is that action called? Sizing Cropping Rasterizing Flattening Screen capturing For illustrative graphics, which of the following states how you should format the figure number and title? Centered above the graphic Centered below the graphic Second-level heading Third-level heading In this chapter, which of the following are the words and phrases that identify the parts of a graphic called? Figure title Labels Legend Cross-reference Which of the following best explains when and how you should indicate the source of a graphic that you are using in a document? Only when you've photocopied it from another source and are pasting it into your document. Only when you copy it from the Internet and embed it in your document. Whenever you borrow a graphic, from whichever type of source (print, Internet, CD), and however you modify it (if at all). If you’ve sized and cropped a graphic, added identifying labels, included a figure number and title, and cited your source for that graphic, which of the following states what else there is to do? Add a cross-reference to the graphic in the text just preceding. Introduce the graphic with a second-level heading. Nothing else you're done! Which of the following best explains which areas you should place graphics in a document (beginning, middle, end, etc.)? In an appendix at the end of the document for easy reference Just after text that directly relates to or refers to the graphic At the end of each chapter (major section) of the document