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Signed social structure optimization for shift assignment in the nurse scheduling problem
Institution:1. University of Lyon, INSA-LYON, University of Jean Monnet Saint-Etienne, DISP - EA 4570, F-69621 Villeurbanne, France;2. Catholic University of Louvain, Louvain School of Management, B-7000 Mons, Belgium;3. University of Valenciennes and Hainaut-Cambresis, LAMIH - UMR CNRS 8201, Campus du Mont Houy, F-59313 Valenciennes, France;1. Information Systems Department, School of Business and Economics, Freie Universität Berlin, Garystr. 21, Berlin 14195, Germany;2. Centre for Management Studies, Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon, Av. Rovisco Pais 1, Lisbon 1049-001, Portugal
Abstract:This paper develops a mathematical framework that relies on modern social network analysis theories for treating the nurse team formation and nurse scheduling (shift assignment) problems, accounting for signed social connections. These problems lie in assigning nurses to teams/shifts such that the constraints regarding both the working regulations and nurses preferences are satisfied. Recent research indicates the dependence of nursing team performance on team social structure; however, so far, the social structure considerations have not been explicitly incorporated into the mathematical formulations of the nurse scheduling problem. The presented framework introduces models that quantitatively exploit such dependence. This paper explores instances of Nurse Team Formation Problem (NTFP) and Nurse Scheduling Problem (NSP) incorporating signed social structure with the measures based on such network structures as edges, full dyads, triplets, k-stars, balanced and unbalanced triangles, etc., in directed, signed networks. The paper presents the integer programming formulations for NTFP and NSP, and a problem-specific heuristic that performs variable-depth neighborhood search to tackle NTFP instances with signed social structures. Computational results for a real-world problem instance with 20 nurses are reported. The insights obtained from the presented framework and future research directions are discussed.
Keywords:Team formation  Nurse scheduling  Shift assignment  Signed social networks  Discrete optimization
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