A Game Theoretic Approach to Multi-Period Newsvendor Problems with Censored Markovian Demand

Author(s):  
Farzaneh Mansourifard ◽  
Parisa Mansourifard ◽  
Bhaskar Krishnamachari

This paper studies the Newsvendor problem for a setting in which (i) the demand is temporally correlated, (ii) the demand is censored, (iii) the distribution of the demand is unknown. The correlation is modeled as a Markovian process. The censoring means that if the demand is larger than the action (selected inventory), only a lower bound on the demand can be revealed. The uncertainty set on the demand distribution is given by only the upper and lower bound on the amount of the change from a time to the next time. We propose a robust approach to minimize the worst-case total cost and model it as a min-max zero-sum repeated game. We prove that the worst-case distribution of the adversary at each time is a two-point distribution with non-zero probabilities at the extrema of the uncertainty set of the demand. And the optimal action of the decision-maker can have any of the following structures: (i) a randomized solution with a two-point distribution at the extrema, (ii) a deterministic solution at a convex combination of the extrema. Both above solutions balance over-utilization and under-utilization costs. Finally, we extend our results to uni-model cost functions and present numerical results to study the solution.

2011 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 497-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine C. Langlois ◽  
Jean-Pierre P. Langlois

Our goal in this article is to examine the strategic interaction between terror groups, hosts, and the United States in order to better understand the parameters of the interaction and the elements of a winning strategy. We adopt a game theoretic approach assuming that each player has a well defined goal and accounts for the anticipated behavior of the others to develop strategy. The game that we develop is a repeated game in which the host and the US must decide whether to fight a terrorist organization whose membership and resources will grow indefinitely if left unchecked. Our model predicts circumstances in which a host will begin to push back against the terrorists in anticipation of a future involvement of the US. It also predicts circumstances in which the terrorist organization’s hatred of the US prompts attacks that seal its fate and early demise.


Author(s):  
William Steinhour ◽  
K. Krishnamurthy

Abstract To develop a successful product in modern industry, it is necessary to incorporate design performance requirements, manufacturing processes requirements and cost considerations in the early stages of the product design cycle. In this study, a game-theoretic framework for integrated product design is discussed. A minimax game formulation is developed and applied to the design of a simplified automobile door. Results are presented with the design engineer, manufacturing engineer and cost accountant each represented by a player. The minimax game yields a conservative solution and represents the worst-case scenario. This study explores how the game-theoretic approach can be effectively implemented to design a product while satisfying conflicting requirements.


Author(s):  
Gerrit K. Janssens ◽  
Lotte Verdonck ◽  
Katrien Ramaekers

Facing uncertainty in demand, companies try to avoid stock-outs by holding safety inventories, depending on a pre-set customer service level. The knowledge of the demand distribution during lead-time serves to determine the safety inventory level. Many times the distribution is not fully known, except maybe for its range, mean or variance. However literature shows that the performance of holding safety stock strongly depends on the characteristics of the distribution. One option is to protect against the worst case distribution given some information like range or moments. But this worst case is a two-point distribution, bringing unbelief to managers that such an occurrence would ever appear. Mostly they share the opinion that the demand distribution is unimodal. This research develops a technique to derive the safety stock for unimodal demand distributions of which the mode either is known or can be estimated. In this way, the managers obtain solutions to the decision problem including a higher belief that the related type of distribution might appear in practice.


1982 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Alan Batlin ◽  
Susan Hinko

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