2009
DOI: 10.1002/net.20337
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A two‐stage vehicle routing model for large‐scale bioterrorism emergencies

Abstract: In this article, we are interested in routing vehicles to service a large-scale bioterrorism emergency. We describe the specifics of routing vehicles in such a large-scale emergency and decompose the problem into two stages: a planning stage and an operational stage. In the planning stage, we generate the routes well in advance of any emergency. In the operational stage, we take into account the planned routes and the information revealed at the time of the emergency, to decide the delivery quantity and any ad… Show more

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Cited by 107 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
(89 reference statements)
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“…Through random or fuzzy variables, many authors also considered the uncertainty related to the relief distribution context that are reflected in demand, arc capacity, travel time or network reliability Barbarosoǧlu & Arda 2004;Shen et al 2009;Vitoriano et al 2009;Vitoriano et al 2011). These papers' main contribution acknowledges the different sources of uncertainty in a post-disaster context, thus providing crisis managers with a more robust distribution plan.…”
Section: Transportation Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Through random or fuzzy variables, many authors also considered the uncertainty related to the relief distribution context that are reflected in demand, arc capacity, travel time or network reliability Barbarosoǧlu & Arda 2004;Shen et al 2009;Vitoriano et al 2009;Vitoriano et al 2011). These papers' main contribution acknowledges the different sources of uncertainty in a post-disaster context, thus providing crisis managers with a more robust distribution plan.…”
Section: Transportation Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These operators are widely used to solve a variety of vehicle routing problems [1,20,25,30]. In particular, one of the following 7 local search operators is randomly selected at each iteration of the Simulated Annealing algorithm.…”
Section: Local Searchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flexibility has therefore been recognized as one of the success factors of HSCs (Manoj et al 2015;Bozorgi-Amiri and Asvadi 2015;Abounacer et al 2014;Najafi et al 2013;Yushimito et al 2012;Afshar and Haghani 2012;Shen et al 2009;Abidi et al 2013). Flexibility impacts organizational structures, information systems, and logistics processes (Scholten et al 2010).…”
Section: Flexibility In Humanitarian Supply Chainsmentioning
confidence: 99%