Scheduling interrelated activities in complex projects under high-order rework: a DSM-based approach
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2668674
DOI10.1016/j.cor.2021.105246OpenAlexW3127750852MaRDI QIDQ2668674
Weihao Huang, Muchen Wen, Jun Lin, Yanjun Qian
Publication date: 7 March 2022
Published in: Computers \& Operations Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cor.2021.105246
Cites Work
- An effective approach for scheduling coupled activities in development projects
- Solving resource-constrained project scheduling problems: conceptual validation of FLP formulation and efficient permutation-based ABC computation
- A branch-cut-and-price algorithm for the vehicle routing problem with stochastic demands
- Project scheduling with finite or infinite number of activity processing modes -- a survey
- A neurogenetic approach for the resource-constrained project scheduling problem
- An updated survey on the linear ordering problem for weighted or unweighted tournaments
- Optimal testing strategies in overlapped design process
- Overlapping and communication policies in product development
- Models for concurrent product and process design
- Partial evaluation in rank aggregation problems
- Tabu search for the dynamic bipartite drawing problem
- Lean holistic fuzzy methodology employing cross-functional worker teams for new product development projects: a real case study from high-tech industry
- Block-insertion-based algorithms for the linear ordering problem
- A dynamic model for managing overlapped iterative product development
- The linear ordering problem revisited
- A fitness differential adaptive parameter controlled evolutionary algorithm with application to the design structure matrix
- A Predictive Model of Sequential Iteration in Engineering Design
- A Stochastic Branch-and-Bound Approach to Activity Crashing in Project Management
- Structuring product development processes
This page was built for publication: Scheduling interrelated activities in complex projects under high-order rework: a DSM-based approach