Quantification of Uncertainty in Transportation Infrastructure Projects
Author(s):
Ryan Rosandich, Santiago Erquicia
June 2005
Report no. CTS 05-06
Monte Carlo simulation is the currently accepted method for quantifying uncertainty in projects. It
was the goal of the research presented in this report to develop a purely computational technique, based
on traditional probability theory, for quantifying project uncertainty with accuracy equal to or greater
than that of Monte Carlo simulation. Series and parallel operators were developed for combining
independent task uncertainties in project networks. The operators were used to compute overall project
uncertainty given individual task uncertainty, and to calculate slack and the degree of criticality for each
task. Additional techniques were developed to deal with networks where the series and parallel operator
were not enough, specifically those with path dependencies. Results equal or exceed the accuracy of
Monte Carlo simulation, but computational times exceed those of Monte Carlo simulation for networks
with many dependencies.
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