37,131 research outputs found
Supply chain collaboration
In the past, research in operations management focused on single-firm analysis. Its goal was to provide managers in practice with suitable tools to improve the performance of their firm by calculating optimal inventory quantities, among others. Nowadays, business decisions are dominated by the globalization of markets and increased competition among firms. Further, more and more products reach the customer through supply chains that are composed of independent firms. Following these trends, research in operations management has shifted its focus from single-firm analysis to multi-firm analysis, in particular to improving the efficiency and performance of supply chains under decentralized control. The main characteristics of such chains are that the firms in the chain are independent actors who try to optimize their individual objectives, and that the decisions taken by a firm do also affect the performance of the other parties in the supply chain. These interactions among firms’ decisions ask for alignment and coordination of actions. Therefore, game theory, the study of situations of cooperation or conflict among heterogenous actors, is very well suited to deal with these interactions. This has been recognized by researchers in the field, since there are an ever increasing number of papers that applies tools, methods and models from game theory to supply chain problems
Skewness of the wage distribution in a firm and the substitutability of labor inputs
wages;game theory;organizational structure;managerial science
Operations Research Games: A Survey
This paper surveys the research area of cooperative games associated with several types of operations research problems in which various decision makers (players) are involved.Cooperating players not only face a joint optimisation problem in trying, e.g., to minimise total joint costs, but also face an additional allocation problem in how to distribute these joint costs back to the individual players.This interplay between optimisation and allocation is the main subject of the area of operations research games.It is surveyed on the basis of a distinction between the nature of the underlying optimisation problem: connection, routing, scheduling, production and inventory.cooperative games;operational research
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Assessment of anaerobic co-digestion of food waste and wastewater solids for sustainable waste management in Yosemite National Park, USA
The growing need for sustainable municipal solid waste treatment and energy production has driven the development of new waste management methods like co-digestion. Anaerobic co-digestion of food waste (FW) and wastewater solids (WWS) has been implemented at a few wastewater treatments plants to efficiently treat organic wastes and produce methane-rich biogas as an energy source. Yosemite National Park has an opportunity to design a new co-digestion facility with an upcoming upgrade to their local wastewater treatment plant in El Portal, California. The Park annually produces approximately 5 million tons of primary WWS and 1 million tons of FW waste, with a volatile solid ratio of 70:30 FW to WWS, or 70% FW. Diverted FW is currently sent to the Mariposa County landfill’s compost facility. To measure the possible increase in biogas production associated with FW addition to WWS, a biochemical methane potential (BMP) test was done over 35 days under mesophilic conditions with treatment mixing ratios ranging from 0% to 100% FW on a volatile solids basis. Calculated annual methane production increased 3.25 times from 0% FW scenario (WWS only) versus a 70% FW scenario, translating to a potential increase in methane production at the wastewater treatment plant of 28,000 to 91,000 m3/yr. Results showed that if the wastewater treatment plant also implemented combined heat and power to combust the increased biogas from 70% FW co-digestion, potentially 920,000 kWh/yr could be produced to cover all electricity and heating needs. This research demonstrates that Yosemite National Park could combine FW and WWS to sustainably manage their organic waste in line with their Zero Landfill Initiative, as well as produce enough energy to fully power the El Portal wastewater treatment plant
Linear Transformation of Products: Games and Economies
AMS classifications: 90A15, 90D12.linear transformation;cooperative games;economies;price equilibria
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