Decision Analysis, Location Models, and Scheduling Problems von H. A. Eiselt | ISBN 9783642073151

Decision Analysis, Location Models, and Scheduling Problems

von H. A. Eiselt und Carl-Louis Sandblom
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinH. A. Eiselt
Autor / AutorinCarl-Louis Sandblom
Buchcover Decision Analysis, Location Models, and Scheduling Problems | H. A. Eiselt | EAN 9783642073151 | ISBN 3-642-07315-8 | ISBN 978-3-642-07315-1

From the reviews:

„Decision Analysis, Location Models, and Scheduling Problems is best described as a broad review of topics relating to decision sciences. … The authors move quickly into detailed topics, gearing the book for an advanced audience. … it could serve nicely as the primary text for advanced OR courses intended to survey many topics in decision making. Eiselt and Sandblom provide several examples illustrating the use of the different methodologies, which may also make the book appealing to practitioners.“ (Brian Denton, Interfaces, Vol. 35 (3), 2005)

Decision Analysis, Location Models, and Scheduling Problems

von H. A. Eiselt und Carl-Louis Sandblom
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinH. A. Eiselt
Autor / AutorinCarl-Louis Sandblom
The purpose of this book is to provide readers with an introduction to the fields of decision making, location analysis, and project and machine scheduling. The combination of these topics is not an accident: decision analysis can be used to investigate decision seenarios in general, location analysis is one of the prime examples of decision making on the strategic Ievel, project scheduling is typically concemed with decision making on the tactical Ievel, and machine scheduling deals with decision making on the operational Ievel. Some of the chapters were originally contributed by different authors, and we have made every attempt to unify the notation, style, and, most importantly, the Ievel of the exposition. Similar to our book on Integer Programming and Network Models (Eiselt and Sandblom, 2000), the emphasis of this volume is on models rather than solution methods. This is particularly important in a book that purports to promote the science of decision making. As such, advanced undergraduate and graduate students, as weil as practitioners, will find this volume beneficial. While different authors prefer different degrees of mathematical sophistication, we have made every possible attempt to unify the approaches, provide clear explanations, and make this volume accessible to as many readers as possible.