Effects of trust-based decision making in disrupted supply chains

The United States has experienced prolonged severe shortages of vital medications over the past two decades. The causes underlying the severity and prolongation of these shortages are complex, in part due to the complexity of the underlying supply chain networks, which involve supplier-buyer interac...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-02, Vol.15 (2), p.e0224761-e0224761
Hauptverfasser: Doroudi, Rozhin, Sequeira, Pedro, Marsella, Stacy, Ergun, Ozlem, Azghandi, Rana, Kaeli, David, Sun, Yifan, Griffin, Jacqueline
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container_end_page e0224761
container_issue 2
container_start_page e0224761
container_title PloS one
container_volume 15
creator Doroudi, Rozhin
Sequeira, Pedro
Marsella, Stacy
Ergun, Ozlem
Azghandi, Rana
Kaeli, David
Sun, Yifan
Griffin, Jacqueline
description The United States has experienced prolonged severe shortages of vital medications over the past two decades. The causes underlying the severity and prolongation of these shortages are complex, in part due to the complexity of the underlying supply chain networks, which involve supplier-buyer interactions across multiple entities with competitive and cooperative goals. This leads to interesting challenges in maintaining consistent interactions and trust among the entities. Furthermore, disruptions in supply chains influence trust by inducing over-reactive behaviors across the network, thereby impacting the ability to consistently meet the resulting fluctuating demand. To explore these issues, we model a pharmaceutical supply chain with boundedly rational artificial decision makers capable of reasoning about the motivations and behaviors of others. We use multiagent simulations where each agent represents a key decision maker in a pharmaceutical supply chain. The agents possess a Theory-of-Mind capability to reason about the beliefs, and past and future behaviors of other agents, which allows them to assess other agents' trustworthiness. Further, each agent has beliefs about others' perceptions of its own trustworthiness that, in turn, impact its behavior. Our experiments reveal several counter-intuitive results showing how small, local disruptions can have cascading global consequences that persist over time. For example, a buyer, to protect itself from disruptions, may dynamically shift to ordering from suppliers with a higher perceived trustworthiness, while the supplier may prefer buyers with more stable ordering behavior. This asymmetry can put the trust-sensitive buyer at a disadvantage during shortages. Further, we demonstrate how the timing and scale of disruptions interact with a buyer's sensitivity to trustworthiness. This interaction can engender different behaviors and impact the overall supply chain performance, either prolonging and exacerbating even small local disruptions, or mitigating a disruption's effects. Additionally, we discuss the implications of these results for supply chain operations.
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subjects Biology and Life Sciences
Business logistics
Complexity
Computer and Information Sciences
Computer Simulation
Decision Making
Decision theory
Disruption
Equipment and Supplies, Hospital - trends
Humans
Medicine and Health Sciences
Models, Organizational
Multiagent systems
Pharmaceutical industry
Pharmaceutical Preparations - economics
Pharmaceutical Preparations - supply & distribution
Pharmaceuticals
Physical Sciences
Prolongation
Reason
Reasoning
Research and Analysis Methods
Shortages
Social Sciences
Suppliers
Supply chains
Time
Trust - psychology
Trustworthiness
United States
Variations
Vendor relations
title Effects of trust-based decision making in disrupted supply chains
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