Course Description
The purpose of this course is to provide students with an
understanding of the key technical and managerial issues in the
effective development and use of decision support systems in
organizations. While group decision support systems (more generally,
groupware) will be discussed, the focus of the course will be on
decision support systems for individuals.
The objective of the course is to integrate developments in the
literature on decision processes, modeling technologies, and
information technologies and discuss their application in the
organizational context. This will be accomplished through the use
of cases drawn from the literature, and with materials drawn from my
ongoing decision support development projects with organizational
partners such as Grant Thornton Inc. and the US Army. A more detailed
list of topics that will be covered is given below.
- The decision processes component will cover process models, bounded rationality and its
implication for satisficing vs. optimizing behavior, and discuss
heuristics commonly used by humans and the systematic types of errors that
are a consequence of using these heuristics.
- The modeling technologies component will discuss decision analysis techniques such as
decision trees, influence diagrams, multi-criteria decision making and mathematical
programming.
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The information technologies component will give students the
opportunity to work with specialized desktop decision support tools
such DPL (decision programming language, a tool used to create
decision tree and influence diagram-based DSS) and Expert Choice (an
analytic heirarchy process-based DSS engine). In addition, we will
discuss the use of client server technology as an enabler for
implementing enterprise wide access to decision support systems.
Examples drawn from LAN-based Client server (best epitomized by
Oracle 7 server with a windows client such as Excel or Access) and
Web-based client server applications will be used illustratively.
The prerequisite for graduate students who want to take the course is
a course on database systems (e.g., 90-746). It would be ideal if you
have also had some prior exposure to management science techniques.
Undergraduates are required to additionally have a 3.25 GPA (on a scale of 4).
Go back to the Course Page
Ramayya
Krishnan rk2x@andrew.cmu.edu