Introduction to operations research, 4th ed.
Introduction to operations research, 4th ed.
Business Modeling With UML: Business Patterns at Work
Business Modeling With UML: Business Patterns at Work
Modeling and IT Perspectives on Supply Chain Integration
Information Systems Frontiers
MDA Explained: The Model Driven Architecture: Practice and Promise
MDA Explained: The Model Driven Architecture: Practice and Promise
A technical framework for sense-and-respond business management
IBM Systems Journal
LPFML: A W3C XML Schema for Linear and Integer Programming
INFORMS Journal on Computing
Computer-assisted supply chain configuration based on supply chain operations reference (SCOR) model
Computers and Industrial Engineering
Decision Support and Business Intelligence Systems (8th Edition)
Decision Support and Business Intelligence Systems (8th Edition)
Information Dashboard Design: The Effective Visual Communication of Data
Information Dashboard Design: The Effective Visual Communication of Data
Performance measurement of supply chain management: A balanced scorecard approach
Computers and Industrial Engineering
Testing terrorism theory with data mining
International Journal of Data Analysis Techniques and Strategies
International Journal of Data Analysis Techniques and Strategies
International Journal of Operations Research and Information Systems
A Supply Network's Optimal Information System and Material Flows
International Journal of Information Systems and Supply Chain Management
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Modern decision-making problems are often characterised by a high degree of complexity and supply chain design is a good example of such a complex problem. In order to solve it, different problem-solving techniques, including descriptive modelling, quantitative modelling, computerised implementation and the presentation of results, should be considered. To achieve that, the goal model-driven supply chain design approach is proposed in this paper. This approach uses the principles of model- driven development to combine various problem-solving techniques. The paper describes the use of goal modelling to formally represent the supply chain design problem, defines transformations to obtain the multi-objective optimisation model on the basis of the goal model and uses business intelligence methods to represent modelling results. An example demonstrating the goal model-driven supply chain design is provided.