Unit 4: How Science and Technology Affect Our Lives

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Last updated 2:12 AM on 3/12/26
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50 Terms

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Science

A way of producing knowledge about the world through observation, evidence, and explanation.

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Technology

The practical application of knowledge (and other ideas) to create tools, processes, and systems that solve problems.

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Cause-and-effect relationships

Explanations that connect why something happens (cause) with what results from it (effect), a key skill for analyzing technology’s impact.

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Digital divide (brecha digital)

Inequality in access to internet, devices, and digital skills, which can widen social and economic gaps.

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Access (to technology)

Who can use a technology and who cannot; differences in access often determine who benefits from innovations.

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Automation

Using technology to perform tasks with less human labor, often increasing efficiency but potentially displacing or transforming jobs.

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Surveillance

The monitoring of people’s behavior or data (e.g., through cameras, sensors, or online tracking), which can raise privacy and civil-liberty concerns.

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Shift in norms and values

Changes in what society considers “normal” due to technology (e.g., replying immediately, sharing location, teleworking).

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Cause connectors (Spanish)

Phrases used to express cause in academic Spanish (e.g., debido a, a causa de, ya que, puesto que).

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Consequence connectors (Spanish)

Phrases used to express results or consequences (e.g., por lo tanto, en consecuencia, de modo que, lo cual).

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Nuance/hedging language (matiz)

Expressions that avoid absolute statements and show complexity (e.g., en gran medida, hasta cierto punto, no obstante, sin embargo).

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Internet penetration

The proportion of a population with internet access; used to compare access levels across countries or regions.

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Censorship and monitoring (Cuba)

Restrictions and oversight of online content, including blocking sites or platforms critical of the government.

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Public Wi‑Fi hotspots

Shared internet access points (often in public spaces) that many people rely on when home internet is limited or expensive.

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Mobile internet (Cuba, 2018)

A service introduced to expand connectivity via phones, though access may remain limited by cost.

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ARPANET

A U.S. government-funded network project from the 1960s that helped lay the groundwork for today’s internet.

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The World (1989)

An early commercial internet service provider mentioned as launching in 1989.

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Internet Service Provider (ISP)

A company that provides internet access (e.g., Comcast, AT&T, Verizon are examples given for the U.S.).

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Streaming

Watching or listening to content online in real time (video or music), a common internet activity.

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Public transportation

Shared travel systems (buses, trains, metros) that can reduce congestion and air pollution compared to widespread car use.

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Viazul

A Cuban state bus company commonly used for intercity routes and tourist destinations, often with amenities like air conditioning.

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Colectivo taxi (taxi colectivo)

A shared taxi in Cuba with fixed routes, usually cheaper than a private taxi.

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Classic cars in Cuba

Older cars (often from the 1950s or earlier) still widely used due to decades of import restrictions and high costs of newer vehicles.

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Emissions controls

Modern systems that reduce vehicle pollution; their absence in older engines can contribute to higher contamination.

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Electric and hybrid cars

Vehicles that use electricity (fully or partially) and are increasingly demanded for environmental reasons.

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Innovation

The process of creating or improving solutions; can be incremental (small improvements) or disruptive (sector-changing).

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Disruptive innovation

Innovation that transforms an industry or sector completely rather than making minor improvements.

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Research (investigación)

Academic, medical, or industrial study that generates evidence and supports innovation, requiring funding, regulation, and public trust.

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Peer review

A scientific evaluation process where experts assess research quality, often alongside replication and discussion.

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Regulation and follow-up

Rules, permits, and ongoing monitoring used to oversee technologies or medical interventions and track side effects or harms.

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Ethics

The evaluation of consequences, rights, and responsibilities to decide whether a technology should be used, not just whether it can be used.

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Informed consent (consentimiento informado)

Agreeing to a medical or data-related intervention with an understanding of risks and implications.

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Equity (equidad)

The principle that benefits should not concentrate only among already-privileged groups; fairness in distribution matters.

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Transparency (transparencia)

The expectation that governments or companies explain how they use data and how decisions are made.

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Responsibility/accountability (responsabilidad)

Clarifying who is answerable if a technology causes harm and what mechanisms exist to respond.

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Trade-offs

Compensations where gaining one benefit (e.g., security) may require accepting costs (e.g., reduced privacy).

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Smart surveillance (vigilancia inteligente)

Using “intelligent” sensors and cameras to prevent or respond to crime, raising questions about data storage, oversight, and errors.

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Clinical trials (ensayos clínicos)

Structured studies that test safety and effectiveness of treatments or vaccines before broad use.

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Emergency use authorization

A special approval pathway that allows a medical product to be used in urgent situations before full standard approval.

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Telemedicine (telemedicina)

Medical consultations delivered remotely via video or digital platforms, improving access for rural areas but requiring reliable internet.

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Digital health data

Sensitive information collected by health apps or devices (sleep, heart rate, mood) that can help care but raises privacy concerns.

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Biotechnology (biotecnología)

Using biological processes to create products or solutions in areas like medicine, agriculture, and diagnostics.

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Genetic testing (pruebas genéticas)

Tests that identify health risks but can create anxiety or lead to discrimination if misused.

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Recommendation algorithms

Systems used by platforms to decide what content users see, based on interactions and engagement patterns.

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Attention economy (economía de la atención)

A business model where user time and engagement are valuable, pushing platforms to optimize for viral or highly attractive content.

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Echo chambers (ecosistemas cerrados)

Online environments where users mainly see similar viewpoints because algorithms reinforce previously engaged content.

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Digital identity (identidad digital)

The image of a person formed by what they post, what others post about them, and data collected from their activity.

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Digital footprint (huella digital)

The lasting traces of online activity (photos, comments, locations, searches) that may persist even after deletion attempts.

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Misinformation / fake news (desinformación)

False or misleading information that spreads online, complicating public understanding and worsening social problems.

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Phishing (suplantación)

Fraudulent messages that imitate trustworthy institutions to steal passwords or personal information, often using urgency or fear.

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