Emphasizes practical issues and examples of decision making  with applications in engineering design and management
  
  Featuring a blend of theoretical and analytical aspects,  Engineering Decision Making and Risk Management presents  multiple perspectives on decision making to better understand and  improve risk management processes and decision-making  systems.
  
  Engineering Decision Making and Risk Management uniquely  presents and discusses three perspectives on decision making:  problem solving, the decision-making process, and decision-making  systems. The author highlights formal techniques for group decision  making and game theory and includes numerical examples to compare  and contrast different quantitative techniques. The importance of  initially selecting the most appropriate decision-making process is  emphasized through practical examples and applications that  illustrate a variety of useful processes. Presenting an approach  for modeling and improving decision-making systems, Engineering  Decision Making and Risk Management also features:
  
  
    - Theoretically sound and practical tools for decision making  under uncertainty, multi-criteria decision making, group decision  making, the value of information, and risk management
   
    - Practical examples from both historical and current events that  illustrate both good and bad decision making and risk management  processes
   
    - End-of-chapter exercises for readers to apply specific learning  objectives and practice relevant skills
   
    - A supplementary website with instructional support material,  including worked solutions to the exercises, lesson plans, in-class  activities, slides, and spreadsheets
   
    An excellent textbook for upper-undergraduate and graduate  students, 
Engineering Decision Making and Risk Management is  appropriate for courses on decision analysis, decision making, and  risk management within the fields of engineering design, operations  research, business and management science, and industrial and  systems engineering. The book is also an ideal reference for  academics and practitioners in business and management science,  operations research, engineering design, systems engineering,  applied mathematics, and statistics.    
Jeffrey W. Herrmann, PhD, is Associate Professor at the  University of Maryland, where he holds a joint appointment with the  Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Institute for Systems  Research. A member of the Institute of Industrial Engineers, the  Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences, the  American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and the American Society  for Engineering Education, Dr. Herrmann’s research interests  include production scheduling, decision making in product  development, and public health preparedness planning.