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This book focuses on a development of optimal, flexible, and
efficient models and algorithms for cell formation in group
technology. Its main aim is to provide a reliable tool that can be
used by managers and engineers to design manufacturing cells based
on their own preferences and constraints imposed by a particular
manufacturing system. This tool could potentially lower production
costs by minimizing other costs in a number of areas, thereby
increasing profit in a manufacturing system. In the volume, the
cell formation problem is considered in a systematic and formalized
way, and several models are proposed, both heuristic and exact. The
models are based on general clustering problems, and are flexible
enough to allow for various objectives and constraints. The authors
also provide results of numerical experiments involving both
artificial data from academic papers in the field and real
manufacturing data to certify the appropriateness of the models
proposed. The book was intended to suit the broadest possible
audience, and thus all algorithmic details are given in a detailed
description with multiple numerical examples and informal
explanations are provided for the theoretical results. In addition
to managers and industrial engineers, this book is intended for
academic researchers and students. It will also be attractive to
many theoreticians, since it addresses many open problems in
computer science and bioinformatics.
This book focuses on a development of optimal, flexible, and
efficient models and algorithms for cell formation in group
technology. Its main aim is to provide a reliable tool that can be
used by managers and engineers to design manufacturing cells based
on their own preferences and constraints imposed by a particular
manufacturing system. This tool could potentially lower production
costs by minimizing other costs in a number of areas, thereby
increasing profit in a manufacturing system. In the volume, the
cell formation problem is considered in a systematic and formalized
way, and several models are proposed, both heuristic and exact. The
models are based on general clustering problems, and are flexible
enough to allow for various objectives and constraints. The authors
also provide results of numerical experiments involving both
artificial data from academic papers in the field and real
manufacturing data to certify the appropriateness of the models
proposed. The book was intended to suit the broadest possible
audience, and thus all algorithmic details are given in a detailed
description with multiple numerical examples and informal
explanations are provided for the theoretical results. In addition
to managers and industrial engineers, this book is intended for
academic researchers and students. It will also be attractive to
many theoreticians, since it addresses many open problems in
computer science and bioinformatics.
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