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Using discrete event simulation to examine marine training at the Marine Corps Communication-Electronics school
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Source Winter Simulation Conference archive
Proceedings of the 39th conference on Winter simulation: 40 years! The best is yet to come table of contents
Washington D.C.
SESSION: Military applications: operational use of military simulation table of contents
Pages 1387-1394  
Year of Publication: 2007
ISBN:1-4244-1306-0
Authors
Jon Davenport  Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, C.A.
Charles Neu  Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, C.A.
William Smith  Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, C.A.
Susan Heath  Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, C.A.
Sponsors
INFORMS-SIM : Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences: Simulation Society
NIST : National Institute of Standards and Technology
(SCS) : The Society for Modeling and Simulation International
ACM/SIGSIM : Association for Computing Machinery: Special Interest Group on Simulation
IIE : Institute of Industrial Engineers
ASA : American Statistical Association
IEEE/SMC : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
Publisher
IEEE Press  Piscataway, NJ, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 4,   Downloads (12 Months): 13,   Citation Count: 0
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ABSTRACT

This paper presents a discrete-event simulation model used to explore various possibilities for improving the training continuum at the Marine Corps Communication-Electronics School. The goal of the analysis is to reduce the average waiting time experienced by Marines as they wait for their formal training to commence. Results show that the implementation of even the least beneficial of these improvements yields a 37 percent reduction in waiting time. The best single change yields an 82 percent reduction. This translates into a 30 day reduction in average waiting time per Marine. If all improvements were implemented, a reduction of 88 percent could be achieved, bringing the average waiting time per Marine down to less than 5 days.


REFERENCES

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Collaborative Colleagues:
Jon Davenport: colleagues
Charles Neu: colleagues
William Smith: colleagues
Susan Heath: colleagues