Lecture Day 1: Introduction To Management Science Linear Programming
Lecture Day 1: Introduction To Management Science Linear Programming
Linear Programming
Introduction to
Management Science
Management Science is . . .
. . . the discipline devoted to studying and developing
procedures to help in the process of making
decisions.
Historical Overview
Venetian shipbuilders of the fifteenth century are
known to have used an assembly line in outfitting
ships
Adam Smith and his study on the merits of
division of labor in 1776
Historical Overview
Frederick W. Taylor is known as the father of scientific
management
Historical Overview
Frederick W. Lanchester attempted in 1914 to
predict the outcome of military battles based on
the numerical strength of personnel and weaponry,
which represented the first attempt to model an
organizational decision problem mathematically.
Historical Overview
World War II developments:
Investigation on the effective use of radar,
Management Science
follows the
Scientific Method
Observation
Management Science
follows the
Systems Approach
Consider an organization as a human/machine
system comprising components such as
machinery, departments, and individual people.
Viewing the organization as a system permits
the management scientist to consider
the individual components in relation to
the entire organization.
Characteristics of the
Management Science Approach
Viewing the problem within a systems
perspective
Types of Models
Iconic model - a physical representation that
actually looks like the object it represents
Analog model - substitutes one property for
another; it can represent dynamic situations
statically
Symbolic or Mathematical model - attempts
to represent non-mathematical reality by
means of equations and other mathematical
statements
Weight (lbs.)
Value
1. Water
3.00
60
2. Tent
3. Food
5.00
60
4.00
40
4. Matches
0.01
10
5. Fishing Tackle
6. Sleeping Bag
4.00
20
3.00
10
0.50
Facts
Available
quantitative
models
Data
preparation
2
Choose
a
model
3
Solve the
proposed
model
1
Formulate
the
problem
Problem
definition
(a verbal
model)
Proposed
model
4
Test
the
solution
Proposed
solution
Unsatisfactory solution
Possible
future
changes
Education,
publicity,
etc.
5
Establish
controls
6
Generate
Satisfactory
solution
acceptance
& implement
Satisfactory
technique
for further
solutions
Report
generation
Useful
technique
MS / OR Applications
Public Sector:
Urban-Social
Health
City planning
Courtroom congestion
Air-water pollution control
Disease control
Dietary planning
MS / OR Applications
Private Sector:
Service
Industrial
Portfolio management
Production scheduling
Optimal inventory
policies
Distribution of
products
Working capital
management
Plant layouts
Quality control
Queuing analysis of
facilities
Linear Programming
Canonical Form of a
Linear Programming Model
Maximize:
Subject to:
and
Nutrient
Gallon
of
milk
Pound
of
tuna
Vit. A
6,400
237
Vit. C
40
Vit. D
Loaf
of
bread
Pound
of
spinach
RDA
34,000
5,000 IU
71
75 mg
540
400 IU
Iron
28
13
12 mg
Cost
P1.95
P1.80
P0.75
P0.80
75
12