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Analyse von Einzugsgebieten×Least-Cost Path / Cost-Distance Analysis×Standortzuweisungsmodelle×Das Vehicle Routing Problem (VRP)×
FachgebietRäumliche AnalyseRäumliche AnalyseRäumliche AnalyseOptimierung
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Entstehungsjahr2001199419631959
UrheberHarvey Miller & Shih-Lung ShawEdsger Dijkstra (shortest path); GIS cost-surface adaptationLeon Cooper; S. L. HakimiGeorge Dantzig & John Ramser
TypNetwork GIS pipelineRaster cost-surface routingSpatial facility-location optimizationCombinatorial optimization problem
Wegweisende QuelleMiller, H. J., & Shaw, S.-L. (2001). Geographic Information Systems for Transportation: Principles and Applications. Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19-512394-4Dijkstra, E. W. (1959). A note on two problems in connexion with graphs. Numerische Mathematik, 1(1), 269–271. DOI ↗Cooper, L. (1963). Location-allocation problems. Operations Research, 11(3), 331–343. DOI ↗Dantzig, G. B., & Ramser, J. H. (1959). The truck dispatching problem. Management Science, 6(1), 80–91. DOI ↗
AliasnamenIsochrone Analysis, Network Catchment Area Analysis, Travel-Time Polygon Analysis, Hizmet Alanı Analizicost-distance analysis, accumulated cost surface, least-cost corridor, en düşük maliyetli yolfacility location, p-median problem, maximal covering location problem, yer-tahsis modelleriCapacitated Vehicle Routing Problem, Fleet Routing Problem, Multi-Vehicle Routing Problem, Araç Rotalama Problemi
Verwandt3343
ZusammenfassungService Area Analysis delineates the geographic region reachable from one or more origin facilities within a specified travel cost — typically time, distance, or generalized impedance — by traversing a real road or transit network. It is widely used by urban planners, public health officials, logistics managers, and emergency response coordinators who need to understand actual accessibility rather than simple straight-line buffers.Least-cost path analysis finds the route between two locations that minimizes accumulated travel cost across a landscape, rather than minimizing straight-line distance. By encoding terrain, slope, land cover, and other frictions into a cost surface and accumulating cost outward from a source, it identifies optimal corridors for roads, pipelines, trails, power lines, and wildlife movement — a core raster-GIS technique built on Dijkstra's shortest-path logic.Location-allocation models decide where to place a set of facilities and simultaneously assign demand points to them so as to optimize an objective such as total travel cost, worst-case distance, or population covered. Rooted in the operations-research work of Cooper (1963) and Hakimi (1964) and central to network GIS, they answer questions like where to site warehouses, hospitals, fire stations, or schools to best serve a spatially distributed population.The Vehicle Routing Problem (VRP) seeks the minimum-cost set of routes for a fleet of vehicles to serve a collection of geographically dispersed customers, each with a known demand, departing from and returning to a central depot. Originally formulated as the Truck Dispatching Problem by Dantzig and Ramser in 1959, VRP is a foundational model in logistics, supply chain management, and operations research, applicable whenever goods or services must be delivered efficiently across multiple stops.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergleichen: Service Area Analysis · Least-Cost Path · Location-Allocation · Vehicle Routing Problem. Abgerufen am 2026-06-18 von https://scholargate.app/de/compare