ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.

This dissertation contains a number of varied, yet closely related, results that are relevant to the construction of mathematical and statistical models of inventory systems. Its primary focus is on the sensitivity of some specific inventory models to errors in certain modeling assumptions. Motivati...

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Main Author: MYKYTKA, EDWARD FRANK.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186204
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1862042015-10-23T04:32:37Z ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND. MYKYTKA, EDWARD FRANK. Inventories -- Mathematical models. Inventory control. Demand (Economic theory) -- Mathematical models. This dissertation contains a number of varied, yet closely related, results that are relevant to the construction of mathematical and statistical models of inventory systems. Its primary focus is on the sensitivity of some specific inventory models to errors in certain modeling assumptions. Motivation for this research is provided through the development of analytical expressions that show that the deterministic economic order quantity can be quite sensitive to errors in the forecast of the demand rate whenever the lead time is non-zero. Similar results are provided for the stochastic case by means of a carefully designed experiment that shows that the specific form or "shape" of the distribution chosen to represent the stochastic behavior of the lead time demand can have a significant impact on a minimum cost (Q,R) policy. Together, these results refute the "conventional wisdom" that inventory models are generally insensitive to errors in model specification or parameter estimation. Considerable attention is also given to the postulation of a "robust" model for the lead time demand distribution (LTDD). This discussion culminates with the introduction of a new probability distribution, based on a hyperbolic cosine transformation of normal random variables, that appears to be well-suited for modeling the LTDD. Furthermore, it is concluded that the two- and three-parameter versions of the lognormal and inverse Gaussian distributions can also be considered as viable candidates to model the LTDD in a wide variety of inventory systems. A number of new algorithms for computing optimal (Q,R) policies are also introduced. These significantly reduce both the amount and complexity of computation required by the standard iterative method. Two additional sets of analytical results are chronicled in this work. The first allows the LTDD to be characterized (by its first four moments) on the basis of information about the distributions of the lead time and demand rate. The second expresses the linear loss functions (LLF's) for a number of probability distributions whose LLF's are not readily available in the inventory control literature. Complete and intuitive proofs of these results are included. 1983 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186204 688639718 8315299 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Inventories -- Mathematical models.
Inventory control.
Demand (Economic theory) -- Mathematical models.
spellingShingle Inventories -- Mathematical models.
Inventory control.
Demand (Economic theory) -- Mathematical models.
MYKYTKA, EDWARD FRANK.
ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.
description This dissertation contains a number of varied, yet closely related, results that are relevant to the construction of mathematical and statistical models of inventory systems. Its primary focus is on the sensitivity of some specific inventory models to errors in certain modeling assumptions. Motivation for this research is provided through the development of analytical expressions that show that the deterministic economic order quantity can be quite sensitive to errors in the forecast of the demand rate whenever the lead time is non-zero. Similar results are provided for the stochastic case by means of a carefully designed experiment that shows that the specific form or "shape" of the distribution chosen to represent the stochastic behavior of the lead time demand can have a significant impact on a minimum cost (Q,R) policy. Together, these results refute the "conventional wisdom" that inventory models are generally insensitive to errors in model specification or parameter estimation. Considerable attention is also given to the postulation of a "robust" model for the lead time demand distribution (LTDD). This discussion culminates with the introduction of a new probability distribution, based on a hyperbolic cosine transformation of normal random variables, that appears to be well-suited for modeling the LTDD. Furthermore, it is concluded that the two- and three-parameter versions of the lognormal and inverse Gaussian distributions can also be considered as viable candidates to model the LTDD in a wide variety of inventory systems. A number of new algorithms for computing optimal (Q,R) policies are also introduced. These significantly reduce both the amount and complexity of computation required by the standard iterative method. Two additional sets of analytical results are chronicled in this work. The first allows the LTDD to be characterized (by its first four moments) on the basis of information about the distributions of the lead time and demand rate. The second expresses the linear loss functions (LLF's) for a number of probability distributions whose LLF's are not readily available in the inventory control literature. Complete and intuitive proofs of these results are included.
author MYKYTKA, EDWARD FRANK.
author_facet MYKYTKA, EDWARD FRANK.
author_sort MYKYTKA, EDWARD FRANK.
title ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.
title_short ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.
title_full ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.
title_fullStr ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.
title_full_unstemmed ON SOME STATISTICAL PROBLEMS IN INVENTORY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATED WITH MODELING THE LEAD TIME DEMAND.
title_sort on some statistical problems in inventory systems associated with modeling the lead time demand.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1983
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186204
work_keys_str_mv AT mykytkaedwardfrank onsomestatisticalproblemsininventorysystemsassociatedwithmodelingtheleadtimedemand
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