Amit Eynan
Washington University in St. Louis
8 Papers
49 Citations
Amit Eynan is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Learning effect & Inventory control. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications. Previous affiliations of Amit Eynan include Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.
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Papers
Note-Deriving the Optimal Boundaries for Class-Based Automatic Storage/Retrieval Systems
Meir J. Rosenblatt,Amit Eynan +1 more
TL;DR: It is shown that most of the potential improvement in the expected one-way travel time can be obtained when the warehouse is divided into a relatively small number of regions, and there is no need to use the full-turnover approach.
Component commonality effects on inventory costs
Amit Eynan,Meir J. Rosenblatt +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of increasing component commonality for a single-period model with a two-product, two-level configuration under a general component cost structure is considered.
107
Periodic review and joint replenishment in stochastic demand environments
Amit Eynan,Dean H. Kropp +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the joint replenishment problem for multiple items under stochastic demands and suggested simple heuristics which provided very good results. And they found that the simple procedures combined with the robustness of the cost function to be very attractive in other applications which require coordination of cycle times under Stochastic demands.
59
Assemble to order and assemble in advance in a single-period stochastic environment
TL;DR: The two policies, AIA and ATO, as well as a composite one, are compared and analyzed in light of these trade-offs and the composite model, which is shown as the dominating policy, is extended to deal with the following two scenarios.
27
An analysis of purchasing costs as the number of products‘ components is reduced
Amit Eynan,Meir J. Rosenblatt +1 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that having process flexibility, e.g., of producing a product in two different ways, using two different product structures (as opposed to one), is advantageous with respect to components purchasing costs.
17