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Institution

HEC Montréal

EducationMontreal, Quebec, Canada
About: HEC Montréal is a education organization based out in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Vehicle routing problem & Corporate governance. The organization has 1221 authors who have published 5708 publications receiving 196862 citations. The organization is also known as: Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales de Montreal & HEC Montreal.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Jérémy Omer1
TL;DR: A mixed-integer linear model based on space discretization is developed so that complex situations can be solved in near real-time and can solve complex situations within a few seconds without incurring more than a few kilograms of extra fuel consumption per aircraft.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A large neighborhood search heuristic is presented to solve an integrated aircraft and passenger recovery problem, consisting of creating new aircraft routes and passenger itineraries to produce a feasible schedule during the recovery period.

64 citations

01 Dec 2016
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore deep decarbonization pathways for the Canadian energy sector that would allow Canada to participate in global mitigation efforts to keep global mean surface temperatures from increasing by more than 2°C by 2100.
Abstract: The main objective of this paper is to explore deep decarbonization pathways for the Canadian energy sector that would allow Canada to participate in global mitigation efforts to keep global mean surface temperatures from increasing by more than 2 °C by 2100. Our approach consists in deriving minimum cost solutions for achieving progressive emission reductions up to 2050 using the North American TIMES Energy Model (NATEM), a detailed multi-regional and integrated optimization energy model. With this model, we analyze a baseline and two 60% reduction scenarios of combustion related emissions by 2050 from 1990 levels, with different assumptions regarding projected demands for energy services and availability of technology options for carbon mitigation. The first reduction scenario includes only well-known technologies while the second one considers additional disruptive technologies, which are known but are not fully developed commercially. Results show that three fundamental transformations need to occur simultaneously in order to achieve ambitious GHG emission reduction targets: electrification of end-use sectors, decarbonization of electricity generating supply, and efficiency improvements. In particular, our results show that electricity represents between 52% and 57% of final energy consumption by 2050, electricity generating supply achieves nearly complete decarbonization by 2025 and final energy consumption decreases by 20% relative to the baseline by 2050.

64 citations

01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: Analysis of effects of vehicle incompatibility on the risk of death or major injury to drivers involved in two-vehicle collisions shows that pickup trucks, minivans and sport utility vehicles (SUVs) are more aggressive than cars for the driver of the other vehicle and more protective for their own drivers.
Abstract: This research sets out to estimate the effects of vehicle incompatibility on the risk of death or serious injury to drivers involved in two-vehicle collisions. Based on data for 3,153,813 drivers, logistic regression was used to model the risk of driver death or serious injury. Our analyses show that pickup trucks, minivans and SUVs are more aggressive than cars for the driver of the other vehicle and more protective for their own drivers. The effect of the pickups is more pronounced in terms of aggressivity, while the minivans turn out to be the most protective vehicle type. The point estimates are comparable to those in the Toy and Hammitt study (2003), but, in contrast to that study, we are now able to establish that a greater number of these effects are significant with a bigger sample size. Like vehicle mass and type, other characteristics of drivers and the circumstances of the collision influence the driver's condition after impact. Male drivers, older drivers, drivers who are not wearing safety belts, collisions occurring in a higher speed zone and head-on collisions significantly increase the risk of death. Except for the driver's sex, all of these categories are also associated with an increased risk of serious injury in a collision. For this risk, a significant increase is associated with female drivers.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A short-turning strategy is analysed, where some vehicles perform short cycles in order to increase the frequency among certain stations of the lines and to equilibrate the train occupancy level.
Abstract: Rapid transit systems timetables are commonly designed to accommodate passenger demand in sections with the highest passenger load. However, disruptions frequently arise due to an increase in the demand, infrastructure incidences or as a consequence of fleet size reductions. All these circumstances give rise to unsupplied demand at certain stations, which generates passenger overloads in the available vehicles. The design of strategies that guarantee reasonable user waiting time with small increases of operation costs is now an important research topic. This paper proposes a tactical approach to determine optimal policies for dealing with such situations. Concretely, a short-turning strategy is analysed, where some vehicles perform short cycles in order to increase the frequency among certain stations of the lines and to equilibrate the train occupancy level. Turn-back points should be located and service offset should be determined with the objective of diminishing the passenger waiting time while preserving certain level of quality of service. Computational results and analysis for a real case study are provided.

64 citations


Authors

Showing all 1262 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Danny Miller13351271238
Gilbert Laporte12873062608
Michael Pollak11466357793
Yong Yu7852326956
Pierre Hansen7857532505
Jean-François Cordeau7120819310
Robert A. Jarrow6535624295
Jacques Desrosiers6317315926
François Soumis6129014272
Nenad Mladenović5432019182
Massimo Caccia5238916007
Guy Desaulniers512428836
Ann Langley5016115675
Jean-Charles Chebat481619062
Georges Dionne484217838
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202316
202267
2021443
2020378
2019326
2018313