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Operations & Supply Chain Management

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Operations & Supply Chain Management Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Operations & Supply Chain Management Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Operations & Supply Chain Management

Seasonality, Cost Shocks, and the Production Smoothing Model of Inventories

Authors
Jeffrey Miron and Stephen Zeldes
Date
July 1, 1988
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Econometrica

A great deal of research on the empirical behavior of inventories examines some variant of the production smoothing model of finished goods inventories. The overall assessment of this model that exists in the literature is quite negative: there is little evidence that manufacturers hold inventories of finished goods in order to smooth production patterns. This paper examines whether this negative assessment of the model is due to one or both of two features: costs shocks and seasonal fluctuations.

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Estimating the Components of the Bid/Ask Spread

Authors
Lawrence Glosten and Lawrence Harris
Date
May 1, 1988
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

This paper develops and implements a technique for estimating a model of the bid/ask spread. The spread is decomposed into two components, one due to asymmetric information and one due to inventory costs, specialist monopoly power, and clearing costs. The model is estimated using NYSE common stock transaction prices in the period 1981-1983. Cross-sectional regression analysis is then used to relate time-series estimated spread components to other stock characteristics.

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A convexity result for single-server exponential loss systems with non-stationary arrivals

Authors
Antony Svoronos and Linda Green
Date
March 1, 1988
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Applied Probability

We consider single-server loss systems with exponential service times and non-stationary Poisson input. We prove that if the arrival rate is given by a periodic function, the proportion of lost customers is convex increasing in the amplitude.

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Characterization and optimization of achievable performance in general queueing systems

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Henri Groenevelt
Date
January 1, 1988
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Operations Research

This paper considers general (single facility) queueing systems with exponential service times, dealing with a finite number J of distinct customer classes. Performance of the system, as measured by the vector of steady state expected sojourn times of the customer classes (the performance vector) may be controlled by adopting an appropriate preemptive priority discipline.

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Queueing systems with service interruptions II

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Linda Green
Date
January 1, 1988
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Naval Research Logistics

We present an exact solution method for a single-server queueing system which alternates between periods in which service can be provided (on-periods) and periods in which the server is out of operation (off-periods). The arrival process is Poisson, on-periods are assumed to have a phase-type distribution, and service times and off-periods are assumed to be arbitrary.

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Polymatroidal flow network models with multiple sinks

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Henri Groenevelt
Date
January 1, 1988
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Networks

We consider the polymatroidal flow network model which incorporates two important extensions of the standard maximal flow problem: general concave objective functions of the vector of supplies to a collection of sinks, as well as polymatroidal capacity restrictions on sets of arcs emanating from or pointing to a common node. A number of important applications are reviewed.

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The impact of the composition of the customer base in general queueing models

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Henri Groenevelt
Date
September 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Applied Probability

We consider general queueing models dealing with multiple classes of customers and address the question under what conditions and in what (stochastic) sense the marginal increase in various performance measures, resulting from the addition of a new class of customers to an existing system, is larger than if the same class were added to a system dealing with only a subset of its current customer base.

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Simulated annealing methods with general acceptance probabilities

Authors
Shoshana Anily and Awi Federgruen
Date
September 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Applied Probability

Heuristic solution methods for combinatorial optimization problems are often based on local neighborhood searches. These tend to get trapped in a local optimum and the final result is often heavily dependent on the starting solution. Simulated annealing methods attempt to avoid these problems by randomizing the procedure so as to allow for occasional changes that worsen the solution. In this paper we provide probabilistic analyses of different designs of these methods.

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The <em>N</em>-seasons <em>S</em>-servers loss system

Authors
Antony Svoronos and Linda Green
Date
August 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Naval Research Logistics

We consider a class of loss systems with exponential service times and a Poisson arrival process with a rate that varies periodically among N levels called seasons. For two special cases, we derive transient and steady-state solutions and provide simple proofs that losses are minimized when the arrival rates for all seasons are equal. In the general case, we describe a straightforward procedure to derive the steady-state probabilities. We also prove that when S=1, the server is generally busier during the high arrival rate seasons.

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