Article ID: | iaor1996354 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 25 |
Issue: | 4 |
Start Page Number: | 104 |
End Page Number: | 113 |
Publication Date: | Jul 1995 |
Journal: | Interfaces |
Authors: | Cochran Jeffrey, Mackulak Gerald T., Savory Paul A. |
Keywords: | practice |
In a survey of practitioners of discrete-event simulation from industry and research institutes who ‘build models for money’, the authors asked about project goals, user backgrounds and training, organizational types and activities, software and hardware choices, modeling team composition, and effort allocation within a modeling project. They found that (1) only about half of the practitioners have three or more years experience, (2) many academics feel strongly affiliated with their industry clients rather than with their university employers, (3) shop-floor supervisors rarely lead simulation projects, even though their knowledge of the system may be unparalled, (4) simulation models are generally described as unique custom models, yet practitioners indicate that they commonly build similar models, (5) although simulators (parameter-driven simulation environments that require no user coding) are now available, few respondents indicate using any simulators for simulation projects.