2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejor.2015.04.022
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Joint optimization for coordinated configuration of product families and supply chains by a leader-follower Stackelberg game

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Cited by 114 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…, Altiparmak et al (2009), Chiang (2012, Costa et al (2010), Jamshidi et al (2015), Nepal et al (2011), Prakash et al (2012, Qu et al (2010b), Soleimani et al (2013), Yang et al (2015) GP (5) Brandenburg ( …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, Altiparmak et al (2009), Chiang (2012, Costa et al (2010), Jamshidi et al (2015), Nepal et al (2011), Prakash et al (2012, Qu et al (2010b), Soleimani et al (2013), Yang et al (2015) GP (5) Brandenburg ( …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…DAPs obtain the higher incentive rate if they avoid interrupting the ongoing transmission of EUs. In (14), the concave function U reflects the gains of operator from serving its NUs by distributing bandwidth W − X between them. NO handles the spectrum sharing mechanism by adjusting (P, p, β).…”
Section: Single Operator As Leadermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We use a Stackelberg game model (SGM) [14], [15] to solve the spectrum sharing problem with a single operator in DNA network, where NO as leader is dealing with DAPs as the first followers and EUs as the second followers. Leader and followers compete with each other for certain resources e.g.…”
Section: B Opportunistic Spectrum Sharing Gamementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stackelberg games [28,29] are considered the natural choice for oligopolistic markets and security domains and are the backbone of security systems such as ARMOR, IRIS, and GUARDS whose decision aim is resource allocation. Stackelberg games are also widely used in supply chain management [37,38]. In Stackelberg games a leader commits to a strategy and their followers make their own decisions having knowledge of the leader strategy.…”
Section: Leadingmentioning
confidence: 99%