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Perspectives in Operations Research: Papers in Honor of Saul Gass' 80th Birthday

Francis B. Alt ; Michael C. Fu ; Bruce L. Golden (eds.)

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Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-39933-1

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-39934-8

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2006

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Reflections on Saul Gass’ Influence

Rudolph P. Lamone

This is an abridged and edited transcription of the author’s opening remarks delivered on February 25, 2006.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 19-21

Four Score Years of Saul I. Gass: Portrait of an OR Professional

Arjang A. Assad

Saul Gass has practiced operations research for 55 years and continues to be a vigorous presence in the field. His multifaceted contributions as a scholar, practitioner, involved citizen, world ambassador, and chronicler of operations research are reviewed in this article.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 23-72

In the Beginning: Saul Gass and Other Pioneers

Alfred Blumstein

This paper is an abridged and edited transcription of the author’s lecture given on February 25, 2006, in honor of Saul Gass.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 73-75

Learning from the Master: Saul Gass, Linear Programming, and the OR Profession

Thomas L. Magnanti

This paper is an edited transcription of the author’s lecture given on February 25, 2006, in honor of Saul Gass.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 77-98

Looking Backwards, Looking Forwards: Reflections on Definitions of Operations Research by Morse and Kimball

Richard Larson

This paper is an edited transcription of the author’s lecture given on February 25, 2006, in honor of Saul Gass.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 99-114

Ben Franklin: America’s First Operations Researcher

Bruce L. Golden

This paper is an edited transcription of the author’s lecture given on February 25, 2006, in honor of Saul Gass.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 115-122

Good Management, the Missing XYZ Variables of OR Texts

Kenneth Chelst; Gang Wang

Introductory operations research and management science textbooks survey a standard set of modeling techniques: linear programming, queueing theory, inventory control, decision trees, etc. The discussion throughout focuses on decision making and often explores the possibility of purchasing additional resources to improve performance. All of the modern texts provide a rich array of real-world examples of successful OR projects. By referring to recognized best practices, we argue that there is another factor: management’s multiple roles that are missing from the problem context. We believe this gap is a factor in why other approaches to problem solving are often more visible and more marketable than OR. We provide examples of discussions of managerial oversight, leadership, and effort that could easily be added to chapters on mathematical programming and queueing, so as to place OR models in a broader context and increase their value.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 123-134

The Operations Research Profession: Westward, Look, the Land is Bright

Randall S. Robinson

As the worthy profession of operations research enters the twenty-first century, the outlook is bright in many respects. Yet various impediments to progress deserve attention. In this essay I offer a personal survey of the situation, focused on the delivery of operations-research services in practice. I begin by reviewing the nature and scope of modern operations research. Then I examine the current status of the profession — what’s going well and what isn’t. Finally, I propose actions that I believe promise to improve the opportunities for operations-research professionals and their clients to undertake beneficial projects.

Part I - History & Perspectives | Pp. 135-149

Choosing a Combinatorial Auction Design: An Illustrated Example

Karla Hoffman

This paper summarizes a talk given in honor of Saul Gass’ 80 Birthday celebration. The paper is modeled after Saul’s well-known book, , and presents some of the illustrations provided during that talk. In this paper, we explain why specific rules might be chosen within a general combinatorial auction framework. The purpose of such rules is to assure that the market mechanism is fair to both buyers and sellers, and so that the auction will end in an efficient outcome, i.e., the goods are won by those that value them the most. The paper describes some of the issues, both computational and economic, that one faces when designing such auctions.

Part II - Optimization & Heuristic Search | Pp. 153-177

Label-Correcting Shortest Path Algorithms Revisited

María G. Bardossy; Douglas R. Shier

In this paper we study label-correcting algorithms, which are routinely used to solve single-source shortest path problems. Several variants of label-correcting algorithms have been proposed in the literature, differing primarily in the strategy implemented to handle the candidate list of nodes. In particular, we study both one-list and two-list versions of the basic label-correcting algorithm; these variants implement either one or two lists to manage the set of candidate nodes. We examine the theoretical complexity and empirical behavior of these algorithms. In contrast to previous studies of shortest path algorithms, our focus is on explaining observed empirical performance in terms of certain intrinisic properties of the algorithms (namely, “sharpness” and “maturity”). In addition, a new variant of the label-correcting algorithm is proposed (PRED), which insures a type of “local sharpness” relative to the candidate list. Computational evidence suggests that this new algorithm, in both one-list and two-list versions, performs quite well in practice and deserves further study.

Part II - Optimization & Heuristic Search | Pp. 179-197