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Natalie M. Scala

Researcher at Towson University

Publications -  28
Citations -  199

Natalie M. Scala is an academic researcher from Towson University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Analytic hierarchy process & Spare part. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 22 publications receiving 121 citations.

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Survey comparing Critical Path Method, Last Planner System, and Location-Based techniques

TL;DR: The most relevant systems used for project management (PM) and project production management (PPM) in the planning and control phases are critical path method (CPM), last pPM (last path method), and project management system (PMS).
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Group Decision Making with Dispersion in the Analytic Hierarchy Process

TL;DR: In this paper, a new method for aggregating judgments when the raw geometric mean cannot be used is proposed, which is motivated by a supply chain problem of managing spare parts in the nuclear power generation sector and can be applied whenever the AHP is used with judgments from multiple decision makers.
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Risk and the Five Hard Problems of Cybersecurity.

TL;DR: This perspectives article addresses risk in cyber defense and identifies opportunities to incorporate risk analysis principles into the cybersecurity field and proposes approaches to address these objectives.
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Managing Nuclear Spare Parts Inventories: A Data Driven Methodology

TL;DR: This paper presents a methodology for developing a spare parts inventory management system with a focus on the nuclear power sector, and the entire approach is illustrated via a test bed nuclear power generation facility.
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A Value Model for Asset Tracking Technology to Support Naval Sea-Based Resupply

TL;DR: In this article, a value model for military logistics that fulfill emergent requests for tailored resupply packages from the sea is developed for the purpose of supporting selective offloading in dense storage environments, where radio frequency identification, barcoding, internal positioning systems, and camera-aided technology are considered as alternatives to a multi-objective decision model.