Decision policy scenarios for just-in-sequence (JIS) deliveries
Purpose: The Just-in-Sequence (JIS) approach is evidencing advantages in efficiently managing variety-driven costs, and reducing the risk of disruption in sourcing, manufacturing companies and third-party logistics.
Miguel Gaston Cedillo-Campos +4 more
doaj +9 more sources
Modelling of just-in-sequence supply of manufacturing processes [PDF]
The customer oriented production led to the growth of complexity of manufacturing and connected logistics processes. In many production companies one of the largest asset on balance sheet is inventory. To avoid inventory problems and to be the winners of
Bányai Tamás, Bányai Ágota
doaj +2 more sources
Controlling just-in-sequence flow-production
Analyses of the customer-order process in the automotive industry show that the vision of perfectly synchronized material flows in complex industrial production and logistics environments is still far from having become reality. The traditional strategy of maintaining high safety stock levels to counter the effects of ever more variety and uncertainty ...
S. Meissner
semanticscholar +2 more sources
Implementation of Just-in-sequence concept in automotive industry: Comparation of Austrian and Serbian model [PDF]
Strong competition and increasing demands from customers continuously encourage companies from the automotive industry to improve its processes. Just-in-time as one of the strategies of managing inventory, which is applied 40 years ago in the automotive ...
Anđelković Aleksandra
doaj +3 more sources
IMPROVING “JUST-IN-TIME, JUST-IN-SEQUENCE” DELIVERY IN FIRST-TIER SUPPLIERS
This paper presents an action-research project aiming at improving the performance of “just-in-time, just-in-sequence” auto parts manufacturing and delivery in three tier-1 suppliers of the Nissan plant in Barcelona.
Joaquin Bautista, Jordi Fortuny-Santos
doaj +6 more sources
Event-Driven Order Rescheduling Model for Just-In-Sequence Deliveries to a Mixed-Model Assembly Line [PDF]
Today’s buyer markets and lean supply chains require build-to-order assembly systems with just-in-sequence (JIS) deliveries. Simultaneously production systems have become prone to supply disturbances (i.e. events) that endanger the synchronized delivery of all JIS components to the assembly line. To uphold production sequence stability, rescheduling is
G. Heinecke +4 more
semanticscholar +3 more sources
Just in sequence delivery improvement based on Flexsim simulation experiment [PDF]
P. Pawlewski +3 more
semanticscholar +2 more sources
Emergent World Representations: Exploring a Sequence Model Trained on a Synthetic Task [PDF]
Language models show a surprising range of capabilities, but the source of their apparent competence is unclear. Do these networks just memorize a collection of surface statistics, or do they rely on internal representations of the process that generates
Kenneth Li +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Just-in-time scheduling in identical parallel machine sequence-dependent group scheduling problem
In this research, a parallel machine sequence-dependent group scheduling problem with the goal of minimizing total weighted earliness and tardiness is investigated.
A. Goli, T. Keshavarz
semanticscholar +1 more source
Parts can be supplied from warehouses to assembly lines via several production-order-independent and -dependent parts supply strategies. Order-dependent parts supply strategies sequencing, kitting and batch supply share enough similarities that allow ...
Frederik Ferid Ostermeier +2 more
doaj +1 more source

