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Biomedical Engineer

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You're a young and ambitious biomedical engineer who leads a research and design team. For six months, you and your team have been working on a device that will help surgeons "see" better as they perform non-intrusive surgeries. The tiny video camera, attached to the end of a long thin metal "string," will enable operations with only tiny cuts, reduce recovery time and make operations less dangerous.

Then you hear some news that does not make you happy. At a professional conference, you learn a competing company is weeks away from introducing its own camera at a press conference. The competitor is at least six months ahead of your team -- assuming you can believe the rumor.

Do you share this information with your superiors, possibly prompting them to pull the plug on your own project? Being second may not be good enough because of the huge investment needed to build the camera.

Or do you keep the news to yourself, allowing work to continue -- maybe to the point where the company can't abandon it -- and hope the rumor is wrong?

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