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Digital Library of the
European Council for Modelling and Simulation |
Title: |
Needs And Approach For Combining Formal Analysis And Human Instinct In
Logistics Simulation Projects |
Authors: |
Gaby Neumann |
Published in: |
(2011).ECMS
2011 Proceedings edited by: T. Burczynski, J. Kolodziej, A. Byrski, M. Carvalho. European Council for Modeling and Simulation. doi:10.7148/2011 ISBN:
978-0-9564944-2-9 25th
European Conference on Modelling and Simulation, Jubilee Conference Krakow,
June 7-10, 2011
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Citation
format: |
Neumann, G. (2011). Needs And
Approach For Combining Formal Analysis And Human Instinct In Logistics
Simulation Projects. ECMS 2011 Proceedings edited by: T. Burczynski,
J. Kolodziej, A. Byrski, M. Carvalho (pp. 601-607).
European Council for Modeling and Simulation. doi:10.7148/2011-0601-0607 |
DOI: |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7148/2011-0601-0607 |
Abstract: |
On one hand the roles of the
simulation modeller and user in logistics
simulation projects seem to be pretty clear and well accepted; on the other
hand general and domain-specific approaches to formalise
certain steps in a simulation project return to be the subject of research
and development. Typically those approaches head for software engineering and
tool development in order to replace the person in model building steps or
most recently in trace file analysis. Unfortunately, this quite often
relinquishes and intuition of the simulating person. Against this background
the paper draws attention to the benefits from combining both spheres, the
one of formalized algorithms and the other one of the human instinct. Based
upon a discussion of simulation user needs in the logistics application area
an approach is presented that allows mediating between user and software in
both ways, for specifying simulation aims and questions and for deriving
simulation results from seeing behind pure simulation data. By use of an
example the impact the user has on a simulation project and its outcomes is
illustrated. Consequently, conclusions emphasize the irreplaceable role of
the user who brings in objectives, motivation and focus of the simulation
project as well as domain-specific experiences and competences to understand
the real message of simulation results. |
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