Abstract

This article presents a study on the long-term (i.e., steady-state, convergence) characteristics of workers’ skill levels under learning and forgetting in processing units in a manufacturing environment, in which products are produced in batches. Assuming that all workers already have the basic knowledge to execute the jobs, workers learn (accumulate their skill) while producing units within a batch, forget during interruptions in production, and relearn when production resumes. The convergence properties in the paper are examined under assumptions of an infinite time horizon, a constant demand rate, and a fixed lot size. Our work extends the steady-state results of Teyarachakul, Chand, and Ward (2008) to the learning and forgetting functions that belong to a large class of functions possessing some differentiability conditions. We also discuss circumstances of manufacturing environments where our results would provide useful managerial information and other potential applications.

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