2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10696-016-9242-x
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Determining departure times in dynamic and stochastic maritime routing and scheduling problems

Abstract: In maritime transportation, decisions are made in a dynamic setting where many aspects of the future are uncertain. However, most academic literature on maritime transportation considers static and deterministic routing and scheduling problems. This work addresses a gap in the literature on dynamic and stochastic maritime routing and scheduling problems, by focusing on the scheduling of departure times. Five simple strategies for setting departure times are considered, as well as a more advanced strategy which… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The authors integrate randomly sampled future requests into Tabu Search metaheuristics. Investigating the maritime SDVRP and the role of scheduled departure times for vessels, the authors in [148] utilised Tabu Search (TS) and future cargo requests via sample scenarios.…”
Section: Non-reactive Stochastic Sampling Solution Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors integrate randomly sampled future requests into Tabu Search metaheuristics. Investigating the maritime SDVRP and the role of scheduled departure times for vessels, the authors in [148] utilised Tabu Search (TS) and future cargo requests via sample scenarios.…”
Section: Non-reactive Stochastic Sampling Solution Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dynamic version of the problem has been less studied in the literature. The only papers that we are aware of that deal with dynamic routing problems in maritime transportation are Tirado et al (2013), Tirado and Hvattum (2016a) and Tirado and Hvattum (2016b). In their problems, stochastic information on the new cargoes are assumed to be known and are utilized in scenario-based heuristics to produce the solution, whereas no stochastic information is assumed in our case.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%