The snowball effect of customer slowdown in critical many-server systems

Customer slowdown describes the phenomenon that a customer's service requirement increases with experienced delay. In healthcare settings, there is substantial empirical evidence for slowdown, particularly when a patient's delay exceeds a certain threshold. For such threshold slowdown situ...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2016-03
Hauptverfasser: Selen, Jori, Adan, Ivo, Kulkarni, Vidyadhar, Johan van Leeuwaarden
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Customer slowdown describes the phenomenon that a customer's service requirement increases with experienced delay. In healthcare settings, there is substantial empirical evidence for slowdown, particularly when a patient's delay exceeds a certain threshold. For such threshold slowdown situations, we design and analyze a many-server system that leads to a two-dimensional Markov process. Analysis of this system leads to insights into the potentially detrimental effects of slowdown, especially in heavy-traffic conditions. We quantify the consequences of underprovisioning due to neglecting slowdown, demonstrate the presence of a subtle bistable system behavior, and discuss in detail the snowball effect: A delayed customer has an increased service requirement, causing longer delays for other customers, who in turn due to slowdown might require longer service times.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1502.02856