2015
DOI: 10.1111/itor.12205
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

A review on cost allocation methods in collaborative transportation

Abstract: Collaboration in transportation between two or more agents is becoming an important approach to find efficient solutions or plans. Efficiency can be measured in, for example, lower cost or more flexibility. An important aspect of the collaboration is to decide on how to share the benefits-for example, cost, profit, or resources. There are many sharing mechanisms or cost allocations proposed in the literature. Some are based on simple proportional rules and others are based on theoretical concepts found in game… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

0
131
0
1

Year Published

2017
2017
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
8
2

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 218 publications
(132 citation statements)
references
References 88 publications
0
131
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Due to strong competitive pressures and falling profit margins in the logistics sector, carriers have an incentive to form horizontal collaborations that pool their capacities and increase their overall efficiency (Cruijssen et al 2007, Gansterer and. In such coalitions, the planning of logistics operations is performed jointly through the exchange or consolidation of transportation requests and a redistribution of costs or gains, which leads to problems of fair resource allocation and profit sharing (Guajardo andRönnqvist 2016, Padilla Tinoco et al 2017). The collaboration should be stable in the sense that each partner's individual cost is reduced by joining the partnership and the benefit of these reductions is fairly distributed.…”
Section: Equity and Balancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to strong competitive pressures and falling profit margins in the logistics sector, carriers have an incentive to form horizontal collaborations that pool their capacities and increase their overall efficiency (Cruijssen et al 2007, Gansterer and. In such coalitions, the planning of logistics operations is performed jointly through the exchange or consolidation of transportation requests and a redistribution of costs or gains, which leads to problems of fair resource allocation and profit sharing (Guajardo andRönnqvist 2016, Padilla Tinoco et al 2017). The collaboration should be stable in the sense that each partner's individual cost is reduced by joining the partnership and the benefit of these reductions is fairly distributed.…”
Section: Equity and Balancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For examples of applications, see Lozano et al (2013); Frisk et al (2010); Krajewska et al (2008). For a review of studies, see Guajardo and Rönnqvist (2016).…”
Section: Dividing the Benefits Of Platooningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the reasons given above among others, there is great interest for many types of problems arising in networks, in particular in wireless communications and/or its integration with the Internet, in the Operations Research community (for recent references on the topic, see, e.g., Ribeiro et al., ; Risso et al., ; Morais and Mateus, ; Pagès‐Bernaus et al., ; Ye et al., ). Likewise, game theory has proved to be an interesting tool with which to analyze different problems, such as allocation/sharing problems (see, e.g., Petrosjan and Zaccour, ; Moretti and Patrone, ; Nagarajan and Sošić., ; Ackermann et al., ; Guajardo and Rönnqvist, ; Gutiérrez et al., ) or cooperation (see, e.g., Ahmadi‐Javid and Hoseinpour, ; Basso et al., ; Quintero‐Araujo et al., ), from many different areas of knowledge, in particular in communication network problems (see, e.g., Acemoglu and Ozdaglar, ; Gozalvez et al., ; Zhu and Başar, ; Bahbouni and Moussa, ; Goyal and Kaushal, ; van Hove, ; Taleizadeh et al., ; Wang et al., ; Colajanni et al., ; Geng and Mallik, ; Zeng et al., ). Furthermore, game theory has been also utilized to analyze engineering problems in the broadest sense (Sanchez‐Soriano, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%