The LANCS (Lancaster, Nottingham, Cardiff and Southampton) Initiative in Foundational Operational Research: Building Theory for Practice
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Nottingham
Department Name: School of Computer Science
Abstract
The United Kingdom is the home of Operational Research (OR) and itmaintains an application-oriented research tradition which is both trueto its roots and which is also highly distinctive, if not unique. Manyindustries and public services are the beneficiaries of this effort, notleast healthcare, finance, transport and defence. However, the EPSRC/ESRC 2004 International Review of the Research Status of OR in the UK warned thatthis leading position in applied work in OR could be jeopardised in theabsence of a critical mass of researchers developing underpinning theory.In the LANCS (Lancaster, Nottingham, Cardiff, Southampton) initiative,four universities, which have been at the forefront of UK research inOR, have committed to a major expansion of research capacity in itstheoretical foundations, supported by the additional resources availableas a result of the current Science and Innovation call. The universitiesconcerned have already worked together in the creation of NATCOR, anEPSRC-supported initiative aimed at strengthening doctoral programmes inthe mathematics of OR. They have also evidenced their commitment to thesubject by recent decisions (in advance of this call) to investsubstantially in it.In total, the LANCS initiative will oversee additional new investment ofapproximately 12M through the five year period of the award, of whichmore than half comes from the institutions themselves. All theinstitutions have also committed to sustaining this additional capacitybeyond the five year EPSRC funded period. This will have a major impacton the subject. The initiative aims to build and maintain a substantialnew national capacity in its theoretical base by establishing this majorcross-institutional and multi-disciplinary collaboration. Such aprogramme is crucial to support the health of the application orientedresearch which was highlighted as such a strength by the 2004international review. Indeed, the main motivation of this proposal is tounderpin the health of the UK research base in this critically importantarea. This far sighted initiative aims to establish theoreticaladvances in the field which are informed by, and which feed into, realapplications.
Organisations
Publications
Asta S
(2016)
Combining Monte-Carlo and hyper-heuristic methods for the multi-mode resource-constrained multi-project scheduling problem
in Information Sciences
Atkin J
(2011)
A comparison of two methods for reducing take-off delay at London Heathrow airport
in Journal of Scheduling
Atkin J
(2010)
TSAT allocation at London Heathrow: the relationship between slot compliance, throughput and equity
in Public Transport
Atkin J
(2013)
Addressing the Pushback Time Allocation Problem at Heathrow Airport
in Transportation Science
Atkin J
(2013)
Automated Scheduling and Planning
Bai R
(2017)
A novel approach to independent taxi scheduling problem based on stable matching
in Journal of the Operational Research Society
Bai R
(2012)
Tabu assisted guided local search approaches for freight service network design
in Information Sciences
Bayliss C
(2016)
A simulation scenario based mixed integer programming approach to airline reserve crew scheduling under uncertainty
in Annals of Operations Research
Description | Strategic growth of operational research in the UK |
Exploitation Route | Strategic growth of operational research in the UK |
Sectors | Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software) Education Energy Environment Financial Services and Management Consultancy Healthcare Manufacturing including Industrial Biotechology Transport |