Chapter 12 Analyzing Semi-structured Decision Support Systems
Major Topics
Decision Support Systems
Decision Support Systems
Decision Support System Users
Decision Making Under Risk
Decision-Making Style
Analytic Decision Making
Analytic Decision Making
Heuristic Decision Making
Analytic and Heuristic Decision Making
Intelligence, Choice, and Design
Intelligence Phase
Intelligence Phase
Choice Phase
Design Phase
Design Phase
Semistructured Decisions
Dimensions of Semistructured Decisions
Semistructured Decisions in Intelligence, Design, Choice
Decision Support System
Decision Support System Methods
Weighing Method
Sequential Elimination by Lexicography
Sequential Elimination by Conjunctive Constraints
Goal Programming
Analytic Hierarchy Processing (AHP)
Advantage of Analytic Hierarchy Processing
Analytic Hierarchy Processing
Expert Systems
Neural Nets
Recommendation Systems
World Wide Web and Decision Making - Push and Pull
Simulations
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Analyzing Semi-structured Decision Support Systems

1. Chapter 12 Analyzing Semi-structured Decision Support Systems

Systems Analysis and Design
Kendall and Kendall
Fifth Edition

2. Major Topics

Decision support systems
Decision-making style
Analytic and heuristic decision making
Intelligence, choice, and design
Semistructured decisions
Decision support system methods
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-2

3. Decision Support Systems

Decision support systems are a class of
information systems that emphasize the
process of decision making and
changing users through their interaction
with the system
Decision support systems are well
suited for addressing semistructured
problems where human judgment is still
desired or required
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
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4. Decision Support Systems

Decision support systems function to
Organize information for decision situations
Interact with decision makers
Expand the decision maker's horizons
Present information for decision-maker
understanding
Add structure to decisions
Use multiple-criteria decision-making
models
Kendall & Kendall
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5. Decision Support System Users

Decision support systems support the
decision-making process by helping the
user explore and analyze alternatives
through different modeling techniques
Kendall & Kendall
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6. Decision Making Under Risk

Decisions are made under three’ sets of
conditions:
Certainty
The decision makers know everything in
advance of making the decision
Uncertainty
The decision makers know nothing about the
probabilities or the consequences of decisions
Risk
Kendall & Kendall
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7. Decision-Making Style

Decision-making styles of users are
categorized as either
Analytic or
Heuristic
Kendall & Kendall
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8. Analytic Decision Making

Relies on information that is
systematically acquired and
systematically evaluated to narrow
alternatives and make a choice
Use methodical, step-by-step
procedures to make decisions
Value quantitative information and the
models that generate and use it
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-8

9. Analytic Decision Making

Use mathematics to model problems
and algorithms to solve them
They seek optimal rather than
completely satisfying solutions
They use decision techniques such as
graphing, probability models, and
mathematical techniques to ensure a
sound decision-making process
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-9

10. Heuristic Decision Making

A heuristic decision maker makes
decisions with the aid of guidelines
which are not necessarily applied
consistently or systematically
It is experienced-based
Learn by acting, use trial and error to
find solutions, and rely on common
sense to guide them
Kendall & Kendall
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11. Analytic and Heuristic Decision Making

Analytic Decision Maker
Heuristic Decision Maker
Learns by analyzing
Learns by acting
Uses step-by-step
procedure
Values quantitative
information and models
Builds mathematical
models and algorithms
Seeks optimal solution
Uses trial and error
Kendall & Kendall
Values experience
Relies on common sense
Seeks completely
satisfying solution
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12. Intelligence, Choice, and Design

The decision-making process is divided
into
Intelligence
Choice, and
Design phases
Kendall & Kendall
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13. Intelligence Phase

The intelligence phase involves the
decision maker
Searching the external and internal
business environment
Checking for
Decisions to make
Problems to solve
Opportunities to examine
Kendall & Kendall
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14. Intelligence Phase

A DSS can support this phase by having
mechanisms for
Recognizing problems
Defining problems
Determining the scope of problems
Assigning priorities to problems
Kendall & Kendall
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15. Choice Phase

In the choice phase the decision maker
chooses a solution to the problem or
opportunity
A DSS can help by reminding the
decision maker what methods of choice
are appropriate for the problem and by
helping to organize and present the
information
Kendall & Kendall
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16. Design Phase

In the design phase
The decision maker formulates the problem
Generates alternatives
Analyzes the alternatives
Kendall & Kendall
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17. Design Phase

A DSS can supports this phase by
Generating alternatives that might not
occur to the decision maker
Quantifying or describing data, retrieving
data, collecting new data, and
manipulating data
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
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18. Semistructured Decisions

Structured decisions are those for which
all or nearly all the variables are known
and can be totally programmed
A semistructured decision is one which
is partially programmable, but still
requires human judgment
"Deep structure" is structure which is
present but not yet apparent
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
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19. Dimensions of Semistructured Decisions

Three dimensions of a semistructured
or unstructured decision
Degree of decision-making skill required
Degree of problem complexity
Number of criteria considered
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
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20. Semistructured Decisions in Intelligence, Design, Choice

Intelligence
Design
Choice
Unable to
identify the
problem
Unable to define
the problem
Unable to
generate
alternatives
Unable to
quantify or
describe
alternatives
Unable to assign
criteria, values,
weights, and
rankings
Unable to
identify a
choice method
Unable to
organize and
present
information
Unable to select
alternatives
Unable to
prioritize the
problem
Kendall & Kendall
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12-20

21. Decision Support System

A decision support system should be
able to support multiple-criteria decision
making
Kendall & Kendall
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12-21

22. Decision Support System Methods

Weighing method
Sequential elimination by lexicography
Sequential elimination by conjunctive
constraints
Goal programming
Analytic Hierarchy Processing (AHP)
Expert systems
Neural nets
Recommendation systems
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-22

23. Weighing Method

The weighing method entails assigning
various components of the alternatives
a certain percentage and multiplying
numerical scores for the components by
the percentages
Kendall & Kendall
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24. Sequential Elimination by Lexicography

With the technique of sequential
elimination by lexicography, attributes
are ranked in order of importance
rather than assigned weights
Intra-attribute values are specified as
with the weighing method
Kendall & Kendall
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25. Sequential Elimination by Conjunctive Constraints

With sequential elimination by
conjunctive constraints, the decision
maker sets constraints and eliminates
alternatives that do not satisfy the set
of all constraints
Kendall & Kendall
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26. Goal Programming

The goal-programming model contains
Decision and deviational variables
Priorities and sometimes weights
Goals are set for each of the goal
equations
Is of limited use as a DSS tool because
sensitivity analysis for goal
programming is not yet well developed
Kendall & Kendall
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27. Analytic Hierarchy Processing (AHP)

Analytic Hierarchy Processing requires
decision makers to judge the relative
importance of each criteria and indicate
their preference regarding the
importance of each alternative criteria
A disadvantage of AHP stems from the
use of the pairwise method used to
evaluate alternatives
Kendall & Kendall
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28. Advantage of Analytic Hierarchy Processing

AHP has an ease-of-use advantage over
goal programming
The decision maker does not have to be
skilled at formulating goal equations
The decision maker does not have to be
knowledgeable about goals and priorities
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-28

29. Analytic Hierarchy Processing

The three steps in AHP are
Determine which alternative is preferred
over another and by how much, called a
pairwise comparison
Comparing two alternatives to determine which
is preferred and by how much
Repeat the process for each criteria
Rate each of the criteria according to its
importance
Kendall & Kendall
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12-29

30. Expert Systems

Expert systems are rule-based
reasoning systems developed around an
expert in the field
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-30

31. Neural Nets

Neural nets are developed by solving a
number of a specific type of problems
and getting feedback on the decisions,
then observing what was involved in
successful decisions
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-31

32. Recommendation Systems

Recommendation systems are software
and database systems that reduce the
number of alternatives by ranking,
counting, or some other method
A recommendation system that does
not use weights
It simply counts the number of
occurrences
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-32

33. World Wide Web and Decision Making - Push and Pull

The World Wide Web may be used to
extract decision-making information
Push technologies automatically deliver
new Internet information to a desktop
Intelligent agents learn your personality
and behavior and track topics that you
might be interested in based on what it
has learned
Kendall & Kendall
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12-33

34. Simulations

Simulations may be used to make
decisions
The user constructs a simulation and
interacts with it to analyze situations
Kendall & Kendall
Copyright © 2002 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
12-34
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