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  • Cruise itinerary schedule design

    Author(s)
    Wang, Shuaian
    Wang, Kai
    Zhen, Lu
    Qu, Xiaobo
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Qu, Xiaobo
    Year published
    2017
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The Cruise Itinerary Schedule Design (CISD) problem determines the optimal sequence of a given set of ports of call (a port of call is an intermediate stop in a cruise itinerary) and the arrival and departure times at each port of call in order to maximize the monetary value of the utility at ports of call minus the fuel cost. To solve this problem, in view of the practical observations that most cruise itineraries do not have many ports of call, we first enumerate all sequences of ports of call and then optimize the arrival and departure times at each port of call by developing a dynamic programming approach. To improve the ...
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    The Cruise Itinerary Schedule Design (CISD) problem determines the optimal sequence of a given set of ports of call (a port of call is an intermediate stop in a cruise itinerary) and the arrival and departure times at each port of call in order to maximize the monetary value of the utility at ports of call minus the fuel cost. To solve this problem, in view of the practical observations that most cruise itineraries do not have many ports of call, we first enumerate all sequences of ports of call and then optimize the arrival and departure times at each port of call by developing a dynamic programming approach. To improve the computational efficiency,we propose effective bounds on the monetary value of each sequence of ports of call, eliminating non-optimal sequences without invoking the dynamic programming algorithm. Extensive computational experiments are conducted and the results showthat, first, using the bounds on the profit of each sequence of ports of call considerably improves the computational efficiency; second, the total profit of the cruise itinerary is sensitive to the fuel price and hence an accurate estimation of the fuel price is highly desirable; third, the optimal sequence of ports of call is not necessarily the sequencewith the shortest voyage distance, especially when the ports do not have a natural geographic sequence.
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    Journal Title
    IISE Transaction
    Volume
    49
    Issue
    6
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1080/24725854.2017.1299954
    Subject
    Maritime transportation and freight services
    Transport economics
    Tourism economics
    Science & Technology
    Engineering, Industrial
    Operations Research & Management Science
    Engineering
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/413772
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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