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Deterministic/stochastic assumptions in job shops
Authors:Douglas A Elvers  Larry R Taube
Institution:School of Business Administration, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, U.S.A.;Department of Management, College of Business Administration, Bowling green State University, Bowling Green, OH, U.S.A.
Abstract:The study investigates the effects which possibly unrealistic assumptions of accurately predicting operation times may have on relative performance of various job shop dispatching rules as compared with using an assumption of not being able to accurately predetermine such times. The experimental design includes factors dealing with the amount of accuracy in the estimated operation times, job dispatching heuristic rules, and shop loading categories. The stochastic operation times represent two different degrees of inaccuracy; one level reflects an estimated ‘normal’ amount of inaccuracy associated with an experienced predictor (shop foreman) while the other level doubles the amount of variance associated with the ‘normal’ predictor's error. These two stochastic levels are compared to a deterministic level where predetermined operation times are absolutely accurate. Five different heuristic rules are evaluated under six different shop loading levels. General conclusions indicate that an assumption of accurately predetermining actual operation times is not likely to weaken the analysis and impact of the research studies which have been performed using such an assumption. However, a specific conclusion indicates that, for at least one shop loading category, researchers should be careful when extending conclusions based on one operation time assumption to situations involving the other assumption.
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