A group of agents are waiting for their job to be processed in a facility. We assume that each agent needs the same amount of processing time and incurs waiting costs. The facility has two parallel servers, being able to serve two agents at a time. We are interested in finding the order to serve agents and the (positive or negative) monetary compensations they should receive. We introduce two rules for the problem, the minimal transfer rule and the maximal transfer rule. We show that these two rules correspond to the Shapley (1953) value of the queueing games with two servers, as discussed similarly by Maniquet (2003) and Chun (2006a) for queueing problems with one serve, when the worth of each coalition is appropriately defined. If the wor...
We study a situation where several independent service providers collaborate by complete pooling of ...
International audienceWe consider a group of homogeneous and independent single server service provi...
A two-person game is formulated for a queuing situation involving a pair of exponential servers comp...
A group of agents are waiting for their job to be processed in a facility. We assume that each agent...
Given a group of agents to be served in a facility, the queueing problem is concerned with finding ...
A set of agents stand to receive a service. No two agents can be served simultaneously. A Queue has ...
Abstract—In this paper, we study the use of performance-based allocation of demand in a multiple-ser...
A set of jobs need to be served by a server which can serve only one job at a time. Jobs have proces...
Complementary to the axiomatic and mechanism design studies on queueing problems, this paper propose...
A set of agents with possibly different waiting costs have to receive the same service one after the...
We consider a queuing system with several identical servers, each with its own queue. Identical cust...
A set of agents with different waiting costs have to receive a service of different length of time f...
In this paper we consider two queueing systems that serve a large number of customers. Those two que...
We study a situation where several independent service providers collaborate by complete pooling of ...
International audienceWe consider a group of homogeneous and independent single server service provi...
A two-person game is formulated for a queuing situation involving a pair of exponential servers comp...
A group of agents are waiting for their job to be processed in a facility. We assume that each agent...
Given a group of agents to be served in a facility, the queueing problem is concerned with finding ...
A set of agents stand to receive a service. No two agents can be served simultaneously. A Queue has ...
Abstract—In this paper, we study the use of performance-based allocation of demand in a multiple-ser...
A set of jobs need to be served by a server which can serve only one job at a time. Jobs have proces...
Complementary to the axiomatic and mechanism design studies on queueing problems, this paper propose...
A set of agents with possibly different waiting costs have to receive the same service one after the...
We consider a queuing system with several identical servers, each with its own queue. Identical cust...
A set of agents with different waiting costs have to receive a service of different length of time f...
In this paper we consider two queueing systems that serve a large number of customers. Those two que...
We study a situation where several independent service providers collaborate by complete pooling of ...
International audienceWe consider a group of homogeneous and independent single server service provi...
A two-person game is formulated for a queuing situation involving a pair of exponential servers comp...