
doi: 10.3934/math.2024777
<abstract> <p>Multi-objective transportation problems (MOTPs) are mathematical optimization problems that involve simultaneously considering multiple, often conflicting objectives in transportation planning. Unlike traditional transportation problems, which typically focus on minimizing a single objective such as cost or distance, MOTPs aim to balance multiple objectives to find the optimal solution. These problems appear in various real-world applications such as logistics, supply chain management, and transportation, where decision-makers need to consider multiple criteria when designing transportation networks, routing vehicles, or scheduling deliveries. The primary challenge lies in the uncertainty in real-world transportation scenarios, where logistics involve factors beyond cost and distance. We investigated a multi-choice solid fractional multi-objective transportation problem (MCSF-MOTP) based on supply, demand, and conveyance capacity, where the coefficients of the objective functions were of the multi-choice type due to uncertainty. To address this uncertainty, the proposed model employed the Newton divided difference interpolation polynomial method, and the suitability of this model was validated through a numerical illustration employing a ranking approach.</p> </abstract>
goal programming, newton divided difference, multi-choice random parameter, ranking, QA1-939, multi-objective programming, Mathematics, solid fractional transportation problem
goal programming, newton divided difference, multi-choice random parameter, ranking, QA1-939, multi-objective programming, Mathematics, solid fractional transportation problem
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