Competition for medical supplies under stochastic demand in the Covid-19 pandemic: a generalized Nash equilibrium framework
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1982227
DOI10.1007/978-3-030-61732-5_15zbMath1471.92206OpenAlexW3133296770MaRDI QIDQ1982227
Mojtaba Salarpour, Pritha Dutta, Anna Nagurney, June Dong
Publication date: 7 September 2021
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61732-5_15
Related Items (7)
Meta-analysis of supply chain disruption research ⋮ A stochastic Nash equilibrium problem for medical supply competition ⋮ Covid-19 PPE distribution planning with demand priorities and supply uncertainties ⋮ Modeling of Covid‐19 trade measures on essential products: a multiproduct, multicountry spatial price equilibrium framework ⋮ Risk-based allocation of COVID-19 personal protective equipment under supply shortages ⋮ Viable healthcare supply chain network design for a pandemic ⋮ A two-stage variational inequality for medical supply in emergency management
Cites Work
- Multicriteria optimization in humanitarian aid
- Supply chain network operations management of a blood banking system with cost and risk minimization
- On the variational equilibrium as a refinement of the generalized Nash equilibrium
- A supply chain network equilibrium model with random demands.
- Dynamics of disasters. Algorithmic approaches and applications. Based on the 3rd international conference on dynamics of disasters, Kalamata, Greece, July 2017
- Supply chain network capacity competition with outsourcing: a variational equilibrium framework
- A multiclass, multiproduct covid-19 convalescent plasma donor equilibrium model
- A stochastic disaster relief game theory network model
- Non-cooperative games
- Equilibrium points in n -person games
- A Social Equilibrium Existence Theorem*
- Existence of an Equilibrium for a Competitive Economy
- Network economics. A variational inequality approach.
- Unnamed Item
This page was built for publication: Competition for medical supplies under stochastic demand in the Covid-19 pandemic: a generalized Nash equilibrium framework