Conceptual Modeling
Conceptual Modeling
X i 1 aX i c(mod m)
Where:
Xi = stream of pseudo random numbers integers from the
interval (0, m-1)
a = multiplier constant
c = additive constant
m = modulus or remainder of m
Observed
Frequency
Cumulative
Frequency
Random Digit
Assignment
.10
.1
00 09
.25
.35
10 34
.40
.75
35 74
.15
.90
75 89
.05
.95
90 94
.05
95 00
Random Variates
Random variates are randomly sampled
information which will be used as inputs to
the simulation model.
Random numbers are together with
empirical or statistical distributions to
generate random variates.
Conceptual Modeling
Conceptual Modeling
Most critical part of the simulation
modeling process.
Model design can impact the following:
Data requirements
Speed and ease of model development
Validity of the model
Speed of experimentation
Level of confidence on the simulation results
Conceptual Modeling
It expects the modeler to have a thorough
understanding of the operations of the
system being modeled.
Often the least understood and removed
from the modeling process
It is considered as an art due to the lack of
defined methods and procedures
Customers
(inter arrival
time)
Queue
Capacity
Service
(Service time
distribution)
Space in
Queue?
No
Yes
Queue for
Service
No
Server
Available?
Yes
Customer
Served
Customer
Leaves
Outputs
Simulation
Model
Model
Objectives
Problem
Situation
Responses
Simplification Approaches
Aggregation of components
Black box modeling
Grouping of entities
Data Collection
Uses of Data in the simulation modeling
process:
Preliminary or contextual data
Qualitative information leading to understanding of
the problem and its situation
Types of Data
Data that is readily available
Layout, throughput, staffing levels, schedules,
service times
TBF1
Time
TBF2