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Zielprogrammierung×Lineare Programmierung×Mehrzieloptimierung – Gleichzeitige Optimierung widerstreitender Ziele×
FachgebietEntscheidungsfindungOptimierungSimulation
FamilieMCDMProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Entstehungsjahr195519471896 (concept); 1989–2002 (evolutionary algorithms era)
UrheberCharnes, A., Cooper, W. W.George B. DantzigVilfredo Pareto (concept); modern computational formulation by Goldberg and Deb et al.
TypMulti-objective optimisation — weighted/lexicographic goal deviation minimisationMathematical programming / continuous optimizationOptimization framework
Wegweisende QuelleCharnes, A., Cooper, W. W. (1955). Optimal estimation of executive compensation by linear programming. Management Science DOI ↗Dantzig, G.B. (1963). Linear Programming and Extensions. Princeton University Press. ISBN: 9780691059136Deb, K. (2001). Multi-Objective Optimization Using Evolutionary Algorithms. Wiley, Chichester. ISBN: 9780471873396
AliasnamenLP, linear optimization, Doğrusal Programlama (LP)MOO, Multi-Criteria Optimization, Vector Optimization, Pareto Optimization
Verwandt843
ZusammenfassungGOAL-PROGRAMMING (Goal Programming — Minimise deviations from multiple aspiration levels) is a ranking multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) method introduced by Charnes, A., Cooper, W. W. in 1955. It turns a decision matrix of alternatives scored on multiple criteria into a structured, reproducible result.Linear programming (LP), pioneered by George B. Dantzig in 1947, is a mathematical method for finding the best value of a linear objective function — such as minimum cost or maximum profit — subject to a set of linear inequality and equality constraints. It is the foundational technique in operations research and underlies production planning, resource allocation, logistics, diet problems, and countless other decision-making scenarios across engineering, economics, and the natural sciences.Multi-Objective Optimization (MOO) is a mathematical and computational framework for finding solutions that simultaneously optimize two or more conflicting objective functions. Rather than collapsing all goals into a single scalar, MOO produces a set of trade-off solutions — the Pareto front — from which a decision-maker selects according to preference. It is widely used in engineering design, operations research, logistics, economics, and policy analysis.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergleichen: GOAL-PROGRAMMING · Linear Programming · Multi-Objective Optimization. Abgerufen am 2026-06-15 von https://scholargate.app/de/compare