Services
Discover
Homeschooling
Ask a Question
Log in
Sign up
Filters
Done
Question type:
Essay
Multiple Choice
Short Answer
True False
Matching
Topic
Business
Study Set
Operations Management Sustainability Study Set 3
Quiz 18: Decision-Making Tools
Path 4
Access For Free
Share
All types
Filters
Study Flashcards
Practice Exam
Learn
Question 81
Essay
Steve Gentry, the operations manager of Baja Fabricators, wants to purchase a new profiling machine (it cuts compound angles on the ends of large structural pipes used in the fabrication yard). However, because the price of crude oil is depressed, the market for such equipment is down. Steve believes that the market will improve in the near future and that the company should expand its capacity. The table below displays the three equipment options he is currently considering, and the profit he expects each one to yield over a two-year period. The consensus forecast at Baja is that there is about a 30% probability that the market will pick up "soon" (within 3 to 6 months) and a 70% probability that the improvement will come "later" (in 9 to 12 months, perhaps longer). Profit from Capacity Investment (in Dollars)
Equipment Option
Market picks up
"soon"
p
=
0.30
Market picks up
"later"
p
=
0.70
Manual Machine
−
120000
210000
NC Machine
140000
160000
CNC Machine
200000
−
200000
\begin{array} { | l | c | c | } \hline \begin{array} { l } \text { Equipment Option }\end{array} & \begin{array} { c } \text { Market picks up } \\\text { "soon" } p = 0.30\end{array} & \begin{array} { c } \text { Market picks up } \\\text { "later" } p = 0.70\end{array} \\\hline \text { Manual Machine } & - 120000 & 210000 \\\hline \text { NC Machine } & 140000 & 160000 \\\hline \text { CNC Machine } & 200000 & - 200000 \\\hline\end{array}
Equipment Option
Manual Machine
NC Machine
CNC Machine
Market picks up
"soon"
p
=
0.30
−
120000
140000
200000
Market picks up
"later"
p
=
0.70
210000
160000
−
200000
a. Calculate the expected monetary value of each decision alternative. b. Which equipment option should Steve take?
Question 82
Short Answer
Doing nothing would yield how much profit if favorable market conditions prevail according to the following decision table?
Alternative
Favorable market
Unfavorable Market
Do Nothing
$
31
,
000
−
$
17
,
000
\begin{array} { | l | l | l | } \hline \text { Alternative } & \text { Favorable market } & \text { Unfavorable Market } \\\hline \text { Do Nothing } & \$ 31,000 & - \$ 17,000 \\\hline\end{array}
Alternative
Do Nothing
Favorable market
$31
,
000
Unfavorable Market
−
$17
,
000
Question 83
Essay
The EMV of a decision with three states of nature is $33,000. If the profit/value under the states of nature A, B, and C is $10,000, $20,000, and $50,000 and states B and C have equal probabilities, determine the likelihood of state of nature A.
Question 84
Essay
Miles is considering buying a new pickup truck for his lawn service firm. The economy in town seems to be growing, and he is wondering whether he should opt for a subcompact, compact, or full-size pickup truck. The smaller truck would have better fuel economy, but would sacrifice capacity and some durability. A friend at the Bureau of Economic Research told him that there is a 30% chance of lower gas prices in his area this year, a 20% chance of higher gas prices, and a 50% chance that gas prices will stay roughly unchanged. Based on this information, Miles has developed a decision table that indicates the profit amount he would end up with after a year for each combination of truck and gas prices. Develop a decision tree for this situation and indicate which type of truck he should select. States of Nature
Alternatives
Lower gas prices
Gas prices unchanged
Higher gas prices
probability
.
3
.
5
.
2
Subcompact
16
,
000
19
,
000
21
,
000
Compact
15
,
000
20
,
000
22
,
000
Full size
24
,
000
19
,
000
6
,
000
\begin{array} { | l | c | c | c | } \hline \text { Alternatives } & \text { Lower gas prices } & \text { Gas prices unchanged } & \text { Higher gas prices } \\\hline \text { probability } & .3 & .5 & .2 \\\hline \text { Subcompact } & 16,000 & 19,000 & 21,000 \\\hline \text { Compact } & 15,000 & 20,000 & 22,000 \\\hline \text { Full size } & 24,000 & 19,000 & 6,000 \\\hline\end{array}
Alternatives
probability
Subcompact
Compact
Full size
Lower gas prices
.3
16
,
000
15
,
000
24
,
000
Gas prices unchanged
.5
19
,
000
20
,
000
19
,
000
Higher gas prices
.2
21
,
000
22
,
000
6
,
000
Question 85
Essay
Suppose a manufacturing plant is considering three options for expansion. The first one is to expand into a new plant (large), the second to add on third-shift to the daily schedule (medium), and the third to do nothing (small). There are three possibilities for demand. These are high, medium, and low with each having an equal likelihood of occurring. Suppose that the profits for the expansion plans are as follows (respective to high, medium, low demand). The large expansion profits are $100000, $10000, -$10000, the medium expansion choice $40000, $40000, $5000 and the small expansion choice $15000, $15000, $15000. Calculate the EMV of each choice. Which of the expansion plans should the manager choose?
Question 86
Essay
A poker player is considering three different options after his opponent bet 200 before him. If the player folds, he will lose instantly. If the player calls, he figures he will win half the time. If he raises he figures that the opposing player will not re-raise him, but rather will either call or fold. He figures the opposing player will call only 1/4 of the time, folding the other 3/4 of the time. If the opposing player calls his raise, he figures he will never win. The pot size is 1,000 (including the opposing player's bet). a. Draw a decision tree for this scenario including the information provided in part b. b. Suppose that the player is thinking of raising to $400 (he will put in 200 to match the opponent's bet and another 200 as a raise, his opponent would then have to put in 200 more to call the raise). Is this the best option or should he instead call or fold? c. At what raise size is the player's EMV of a raise equivalent to simply calling?
Question 87
Short Answer
Doing nothing would yield how much profit if favorable market conditions prevail according to the following decision table?
Alternative
Favorable market
Unfavorable Market
Do Nothing
$
28
,
000
−
$
9
,
000
\begin{array} { | l | l | l | } \hline \text { Alternative } & \text { Favorable market } & \text { Unfavorable Market } \\\hline \text { Do Nothing } & \$ 28,000 & - \$ 9,000 \\\hline\end{array}
Alternative
Do Nothing
Favorable market
$28
,
000
Unfavorable Market
−
$9
,
000
Question 88
Short Answer
There are three equally likely states of nature (High, Medium, and Low demand). If the large factory will post profits of $60,000, $45,000, and - $15,000 under these states of nature, respectively, what is the EMV of the factory?
Question 89
Essay
A local business owner is a bit uncertain of the demand forecast, and is timidly approaching the capacity decision for a business he is about to open. Here's how he describes the decisions that confront him over the next two years."First, I have to choose between building a large plant initially and building a small one that has room to expand. Or I could rent now, and decide whether to build next year. That one, too, could be the large version or the small. If I build small, then after one year, I can review how good business was, and decide whether to expand. If I build large, there is no further option to enlarge."Do not concern yourself with probabilities or payoff values .Simply draw the tree that illustrates the manager's decision alternatives and the chance events that go along with them. Use standard symbols for decision tree construction, and label all parts of your diagram carefully. To simplify, assume that business in the first year, and in the second, can be only "good" or "bad."
Question 90
Essay
Daily sales of bread by Salvador Monella's Baking Company follow the historical pattern shown in the table below. It costs the bakery 50 cents to produce a loaf of bread, which sells for 95 cents. Any bread unsold at the end of the day is sold to the parish jail for 25 cents per loaf. Construct the decision table of conditional payoffs. How many loaves should Sal bake each day in order to maximize contribution?
Demand
400
500
600
700
800
Probability
.
20
.
20
.
40
.
15
.
05
\begin{array} { | c | c | c | c | c | c | } \hline \text { Demand } & 400 & 500 & 600 & 700 & 800 \\\hline \text { Probability } & .20 & .20 & .40 & .15 & .05 \\\hline\end{array}
Demand
Probability
400
.20
500
.20
600
.40
700
.15
800
.05
Question 91
Essay
A toy manufacturer has three different mechanisms that can be installed in a doll that it sells. The different mechanisms have three different setup costs (overheads) and variable costs and, therefore, the profit from the dolls is dependent on the volume of sales. The anticipated payoffs are as follows.
Light Demand
Moderate
Demand
Heavy Demand
Probability
0.25
0.45
0.3
Wind-up action
$
325
,
000
$
190
,
000
$
170
,
000
Pneumatic action
$
300
,
000
$
420
,
000
$
400
,
000
Electrical action
−
$
400
,
000
$
240
,
000
$
800
,
000
\begin{array} { | l | c | c | c | } \hline & \text { Light Demand } & \begin{array} { c } \text { Moderate } \\\text { Demand }\end{array} & \text { Heavy Demand } \\\hline \text { Probability } & 0.25 & 0.45 & 0.3 \\\hline \text { Wind-up action } & \$ 325,000 & \$ 190,000 & \$ 170,000 \\\hline \text { Pneumatic action } & \$ 300,000 & \$ 420,000 & \$ 400,000 \\\hline \text { Electrical action } & - \$ 400,000 & \$ 240,000 & \$ 800,000 \\\hline\end{array}
Probability
Wind-up action
Pneumatic action
Electrical action
Light Demand
0.25
$325
,
000
$300
,
000
−
$400
,
000
Moderate
Demand
0.45
$190
,
000
$420
,
000
$240
,
000
Heavy Demand
0.3
$170
,
000
$400
,
000
$800
,
000
a. What is the EMV of each decision alternative? b. Which action should be selected? c. What is the expected value with perfect information? d. What is the expected value of perfect information?
Question 92
Essay
The campus bookstore sells stadium blankets embroidered with the university crest. The blankets must be purchased in bundles of one dozen each. Each blanket in the bundle costs $65, and will sell for $90. Blankets unsold by graduation will be clearance priced at $20. The bookstore estimates that demand patterns will follow the table below. a. Build the decision table. b. What is the maximum expected value? c. How many bundles should be purchased?
Demand level
Probability
1
bundle
10
%
2
bundles
30
%
3
bundles
50
%
4
bundles
10
%
\begin{array} { | l | l | } \hline \text { Demand level } & \text { Probability } \\\hline 1 \text { bundle } & 10 \% \\\hline 2 \text { bundles } & 30 \% \\\hline 3 \text { bundles } & 50 \% \\\hline 4 \text { bundles } & 10 \% \\\hline\end{array}
Demand level
1
bundle
2
bundles
3
bundles
4
bundles
Probability
10%
30%
50%
10%
Question 93
Essay
Miles is considering buying a new pickup truck for his lawn service firm. The economy in town seems to be growing, and he is wondering whether he should opt for a subcompact, compact, or full-size pickup truck. The smaller truck would have better fuel economy, but would sacrifice capacity and some durability. A friend at the Bureau of Economic Research told him that there is a 30% chance of lower gas prices in his area this year, a 20% chance of higher gas prices, and a 50% chance that gas prices will stay roughly unchanged. Based on this information, Miles has developed a decision table that indicates the profit amount he would end up with after a year for each combination of truck and gas prices. States of Nature
Alternatives
Lower gas prices
Gas prices unchanged
Higher gas prices
probability
.
3
.
5
2
Subcompact
16
,
000
21
,
000
23
,
000
Compact
15
,
000
20
,
000
22
,
000
Full size
18
,
000
19
,
000
6
,
000
\begin{array} { | l | c | c | c | } \hline \text { Alternatives } & \text { Lower gas prices } & \text { Gas prices unchanged } & \text { Higher gas prices } \\\hline \text { probability } & .3 & .5 & 2 \\\hline \text { Subcompact } & 16,000 & 21,000 & 23,000 \\\hline \text { Compact } & 15,000 & 20,000 & 22,000 \\\hline \text { Full size } & 18,000 & 19,000 & 6,000 \\\hline\end{array}
Alternatives
probability
Subcompact
Compact
Full size
Lower gas prices
.3
16
,
000
15
,
000
18
,
000
Gas prices unchanged
.5
21
,
000
20
,
000
19
,
000
Higher gas prices
2
23
,
000
22
,
000
6
,
000
Calculate the expected monetary value for each decision alternative. Which decision yields the highest EMV?
Question 94
Essay
A do-it-yourself homeowner is installing a new toilet. While installing the toilet he must decide on what kind of connecting pipe he will install to the water supply. There are two available options, one that has a shut-off valve in case of a leak and a cheaper one without the shut-off valve. Suppose that the shut-off valve pipe costs an extra ten dollars and that the homeowner must buy one of the two. a. Draw a decision tree for this scenario, labeling the cost of a leak as X and the chance of a leak as P. b. If the chance of a leak causing household damage is 1%, at what $ amount of household damage is the owner neutral on which pipe to buy? c. If the cost of a leak would be $10,000 what is the maximum % chance to leak at which the homeowner would prefer to buy the cheaper pipe? d. If the cost of a leak is $1,000 and the chance to flood .1% which pipe should the homeowner buy?
Question 95
Essay
The EMV of a decision with three states of nature is $50. If the profit/value of A is 1/3 of B and B is 1/3 of C, determine the profit from A if B and C have an equal chance of occurring that combined is twice the chance of A occurring.