期刊名称:MATHEMATICS OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Mathematics of Operations Research
|
Mathematics of Operations Research publishes significant
research and review papers having substantial
mathematical interest as well as relevance to
operations research and management science. |
 |
Instructions to Authors
Submission of Manuscripts. Authors should submit their manuscript to an area editor or, in case a relevant area editor is hard to identify, to the editor. Submissions may be electronic (PostScript or PDF files of the manuscript, accompanied by a cover letter) or hard copy by post (four copies of the manuscript, or fewer in cases of hardship). E-mail and postal addresses of the editor and area editors are available at http://www.informs.org/Pubs/Math/editors.html. To assist referees, copies of relevant unpublished or inaccessible references should also be submitted. Submission is a representation that the author considers the manuscript ready for publication and that it has not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere.
Manuscript Style. Manuscripts should be in English, double spaced throughout. Manuscripts should include a self-contained abstract of up to 150 words describing the main results and should also provide key words. Footnotes are not allowed. Any acknowledgments should appear at the end of the paper, before the references. Figures should be laser printed or drawn in India ink on vellum or equivalent and suitable for photographic reproduction. References in the text should be by author's name and year. Examples of the reference style used by Mathematics of Operations Research can be found in recently published papers. Full references will be printed as below; abbreviations for journals are to be taken from the most recent index of Mathematical Reviews.
Cohen, J. W. 1969. The Single Server Queue. North-Holland, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Eaves, B. C. 1971. The linear complementarity problem. Management Sci. 17 613-634.
Gale, D., H. W. Kuhn, A.W. Tucker. 1951. Linear programming and the theory of games. T. C. Koopmans, ed., Activity Analysis of Production and Allocation. Wiley, New York, 317-329.
Karmarkar, N., R. M. Karp. 1982. The differencing method of set partitioning. Report UCB/CSD 82/113, Computer Science Division, University of California, Berkeley, CA.
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief
Geard Cornueols Graduate School of Industrial Administration Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890 USA gc0v@andrew.cmu.edu
Area Editors
Continuous OptimizationJong-Shi Pang Department of Mathematical Sciences The Johns Hopkins University Whitehead Hall, Homewood Campus Baltimore, MD 21218-2682 USA jsp@vicp1.mts.jhu.edu
Discrete OptimizationÉva Tardos Department of Computer Science Upson Hall Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853, USA; eva@cs.cornell.edu
Stochastic ModelsPeter W. Glynn Department of Management Science and Engineering Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-4026, USA glynn@leland.stanford.edu
Game TheoryNimrod Megiddo IBM Almaden Research Center K53-B2 650 Harry Road San Jose, CA 95120 USA megiddo@almaden.ibm.com
|