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We examine how service should be divided and scheduled when it can be provided in multiple separate segments. We analyze variants of this problem using a model with a conventional function describing the waiting cost, that is modified to account for some aspects of the psychological cost of waiting in line. We show that consideration of the psychological cost can result in prescriptions that are inconsistent with the common wisdom of queuing theorists derived according to the conventional approach (e.g., equal load assignments). More generally, our intention in this paper is to illustrate that aspects of the psychological cost of waiting can be accounted for in the analysis of queuing systems, and that this may have significant implications for the service schemes that are derived.
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Ziv Carmon
INSEAD
J. George Shanthikumar
Purdue University West Lafayette
Tali F. Carmon
Management Science
University of California, Berkeley
Duke University
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Carmon et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a130bc28f1bac20a09ec4f4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.41.11.1806