Review

Journal of the Operational Research Society (2006) 57, 1383–1399. doi:10.1057/palgrave.jors.2602128 Published online 28 December 2005

Forty years of discrete-event simulation—a personal reflection

B W Hollocks1

1Bournemouth University Business School, Bournemouth, UK

Correspondence: BW Hollocks, Bournemouth University Business School, 17-19 Christchurch Road, Bournemouth, Dorset BH1 3LH, UK. E-mail: bwhollocks@bournemouth.ac.uk

Received May 2005; Accepted October 2005; Published online 28 December 2005.

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Abstract

Discrete-event simulation first emerged in the late 1950s and it has grown in popularity steadily to be now recognized as the most frequently used of the classical Operational Research techniques across a range of industries—manufacturing, travel, finance, health and beyond. I have been engaged with such simulation from 1964 up to the present day. This paper reviews the history and evolution of discrete-event simulation from his personal perspective, with a particular interest in software development up to 1992. Extrapolating from that history, the paper goes on to comment on the prospective continuing evolution of simulation and its software.

Keywords:

simulation, computers, microcomputers, history of OR, practice of OR

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