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Michael Hülsmann, Bern Scholz-Reiter, Bernd Scholz-Reiter, Katja Windt
Autonomous Cooperation and Control in Logistics - Contributions and Limitations - Theoretical and Practical Perspectives
English · Hardback
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Description
Many new technologies - like RFID, GPS, and sensor networks - that dominate innovative developments in logistics are based on the idea of autonomous cooperation and control. This self-organisational concept describes "...processes of decentralized decision-making in heterarchical structures. It presumes interacting elements in non-deterministic systems, which possess the capability and possibility to render decisions. The objective of autonomous cooperation and control is the achievement of increased robustness and positive emergence of the total system due to distributed and flexible coping with dynamics and complexity" (Hülsmann & Windt, 2007). In order to underlie these technology-driven developments with a fundamental theoretical foundation this edited volume asks for contributions and limitations of applying the principles of autonomous cooperation and control to logistics processes and systems. It intends to identify, describe, and explain - in the context of production and distribution logistics - the effects on performance and robustness, the enablers and impediments for the feasibility, the essential cause-effect-relations, etc. of concepts, methods, technologies, and routines of autonomous cooperation and control in logistics. Therefore, the analyses collected in this edited volume aim to develop a framework for finding the optimal degree as well as the upper and lower boundaries of autonomous cooperation and control of logistics processes from the different perspectives of production technology, electronics and communication engineering, informatics and mathematics, as well as management sciences and economics.
List of contents
Contributions and Limitations of Autonomous Cooperation and Control in Logistics.- Organizational Contributions and Limitations.- Methodical Contributions and Limitations.- Technological Contributions and Limitations.- Practical Contributions and Limitations.
About the author
Dr. Michael Hülsmann war - neben Tätigkeiten in der Wirtschaftspraxis - wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter an der Universität Bayreuth (Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Peter Rütger Wossidlo - Nachhaltiges Management). Er ist derzeit Juniorprofessor für "Management nachhaltiger Systementwicklung" an der Universität Bremen.
Bernd Scholz-Reiter was founder and head of the Fraunhofer Application Center for Logistics Systems Planning and Information Systems at Cottbus. Since November 2000 he is a full professor and chair holder of the chair of Planning and Control of Production Systems (PSPS) at the University of Bremen where he also serves as director of the Bremen Institute of Industrial Technology and Applied Work Science (BIBA). He was initiator and vice-speaker of the research group on Autonomous Control of Logistic Processes, speaker of the Bremen Research Cluster for Dynamics in Logistics as well as speaker of the International Graduate School for Dynamics in Logistics. Scholz-Reiter is an ordinary member of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, an ordinary member of acatech, the Council for Engineering Sciences at the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities; BESIDE OTHER NATIONAL MEMBERSHIIPS he is a member of CIRP, the International Institution for Production Engineering Research, a fellow of the European Academy of Industrial Management (AIM) and an Advisory Board member of the Schlesinger Laboratory at TECHNION - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel, as well as a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the German Logistics Association (BVL). Professor Scholz-Reiter serves as vice president of the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG). He is editor of the professional journals Industrie-Management and PPS-Management and member of the editorial board of the scientific International Journal Production Planning & Control. He is author and co-author of more than 250 scientific publications.
Katja Windt, born in 1969, studied mechanical engineering with a focus on production at the Leibniz University Hannover and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the U.S.. After her doctorate at the Institute for Production Systems and Logistics (IFA) in Hanover in 2000, she moved to the University of Bremen. There, she worked as a department head at the Institute for Production and Logistics (BIBA) and is still active part in the special research project "Autonomous Cooperating Logistic Processes". In February 2008 she was appointed to a professorship for "Global Production Logistics" to the private Jacobs University Bremen.
Summary
Many new technologies – like RFID, GPS, and sensor networks – that dominate innovative developments in logistics are based on the idea of autonomous cooperation and control. This self-organisational concept describes „...processes of decentralized decision-making in heterarchical structures. It presumes interacting elements in non-deterministic systems, which possess the capability and possibility to render decisions. The objective of autonomous cooperation and control is the achievement of increased robustness and positive emergence of the total system due to distributed and flexible coping with dynamics and complexity“ (Hülsmann & Windt, 2007). In order to underlie these technology-driven developments with a fundamental theoretical foundation this edited volume asks for contributions and limitations of applying the principles of autonomous cooperation and control to logistics processes and systems. It intends to identify, describe, and explain – in the context of production and distribution logistics – the effects on performance and robustness, the enablers and impediments for the feasibility, the essential cause-effect-relations, etc. of concepts, methods, technologies, and routines of autonomous cooperation and control in logistics. Therefore, the analyses collected in this edited volume aim to develop a framework for finding the optimal degree as well as the upper and lower boundaries of autonomous cooperation and control of logistics processes from the different perspectives of production technology, electronics and communication engineering, informatics and mathematics, as well as management sciences and economics.
Product details
Assisted by | Michael Hülsmann (Editor), Bern Scholz-Reiter (Editor), Bernd Scholz-Reiter (Editor), Katja Windt (Editor) |
Publisher | Springer, Berlin |
Languages | English |
Product format | Hardback |
Released | 21.06.2011 |
EAN | 9783642194689 |
ISBN | 978-3-642-19468-9 |
No. of pages | 338 |
Weight | 692 g |
Illustrations | XXXII, 338 p. |
Series |
Springer |
Subjects |
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology
> Technology
> Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Business > Management |
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