
Supernetworks
Decision-Making for the Information Age
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 26. February 2002
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-1-84064-968-0 (ISBN)
Description
The advent of the Information Age has transformed the ways in which individuals work, travel, and conduct their daily activity. Anna Nagurney and June Dong lay out the theory of supernetworks, networks that exist over and above existing electronic networks, in order to formalize decision-making in the Information Age. Supernetworks are conceptual in scope, graphical in perspective, and, with the accompanying theory, predictive in nature. In this book, the authors provide a unifying framework for the study of decision-making by a variety of economic agents including consumers and producers as well as distinct intermediaries in the context of today's networked economy. They provide the conceptual, analytical, and computational tools for the study of supernetworks. Their approach is rigorous and of sufficient generality and detail to give added insight into the behavior and structure of large-scale, interacting and competitive network systems, such as transportation, telecommunication, and financial networks.
Areas studied include: supply chain networks with electronic commerce, financial networks with intermediation, telecommunicating versus commuting decision-making, teleshopping versus shopping decision-making, as well as transportation and location decisions. Case studies drawn from practice are provided for illustration purposes.
Academics and practitioners in economics, business, and operations research along with management scientists, transportation and logistics researchers, computer scientists and applied mathematicians will find this book fascinating and useful.
Areas studied include: supply chain networks with electronic commerce, financial networks with intermediation, telecommunicating versus commuting decision-making, teleshopping versus shopping decision-making, as well as transportation and location decisions. Case studies drawn from practice are provided for illustration purposes.
Academics and practitioners in economics, business, and operations research along with management scientists, transportation and logistics researchers, computer scientists and applied mathematicians will find this book fascinating and useful.
Reviews / Votes
'The book provides a fair argument for the use of equilibrium models to represent systems involving several layers of independent agents. Since the topics addressed are important in the current 'Information Age,' this book is certainly relevant.' -- Patrice Marcotte, Journal of Regional ScienceMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-84064-968-0 (9781840649680)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Anna Nagurney, John F. Smith Memorial Professor, Isenberg School of Management and Director, Virtual Center for Supernetworks, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, US and June Dong, Associate Professor, School of Business, State University of New York, Oswego, US
Content
Contents: Preface Part I: Introduction and Foundations 1. Introduction and Overview 2. Background 3. Foundations of Supernetworks Part II: Multitiered Networks 4. Supply Chain Networks and Electronic Commerce 5. A Multilevel Perspective for Supply Chain Dynamics 6. Dynamic Financial Networks with Intermediation Part III: Multicriteria Networks 7. Multicriteria Network Equilibrium Modelling 8. A Space-Time Network for Telecommuting versus Commuting 9. Urban Location and Transportation in the Information Age Part IV: New Directions 10. Supernetworks of Producers and Consumers 11. Multicriteria Decision-Making in Financial Networks 12. Paradoxes and Policies A. Optimization Theory B. Variational Inequalities and Projected Dynamical Systems C. Algorithms Bibliography Index