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Christine Currie

Academic Homepage

Picture of Christine

Contact Details

Dr Christine S.M. Currie
Mathematical Sciences
University of Southampton
Highfield
Southampton
SO17 1BJ
United Kingdom

+44 (0)23 8059 3647
christine.currie(AT)soton.ac.uk

Downloads

OR60 Keynote Presentation: Writing About Simulation

The slides used at the keynote at OR60 are available for download here.

NATCOR Lectures on Simulation Input Modelling and Simulation Optimization

The slides used at NATCOR 2017 are available for download here.
The spreadsheets used in the practicals are available on Russell Cheng's website.

Output Analysis Tutorial

The slides and Excel files used in this tutorial, which was presented at the Winter Simulation Conference 2016, are available for download here. The paper is available on the Winter Simulation Conference website.

Seminar on Simulation in Revenue Management at RMAPI

The slides that were presented at the Revenue Management and Pricing International conference in November 2014 are available for download here.

FineMix

FineMix is a program developed by Russell Cheng and Christine Currie for fitting finite mixture models to multimodal data. It is written in C, with an Excel interface. The zip file contains all of the files that you need to get started using it, including instructions. Download here

Arrows Classification Program

This is the program, written in Visual Basic for Applications, with an Excel front end, developed by Lanting Lu, which can be used to classify data sets into groups, such that no group contains two sets of data that are significantly different from each other.
Download here

Research Interests

My research interests include

Responsibilities

Current PhD Students

Yalin Bi - competition in revenue management
Gerhart Knerer - modelling dengue fever
Andria Ellina - exploration and exploitation in a non-stationary environment
Simos Zachariades - robust optimisation in network revenue management

Completed PhD Students

Fei Fang - Joint pricing and ordering decisions for competitive perishable products (second supervisor)
Mushota Kabaso - modelling provision of antiretroviral therapy in Zambia
Lanting Lu - modelling breakdown times of machines on an assembly line, with Ford motor company. (2009)
Georgie Mellor - simulation modelling of tuberculosis in areas with high HIV prevalence. (2007)

Current Funded Projects

EPSRC funded project: Dynamic Pricing in the Ferry Industry running until June 2018. EPSRC funded workshop: Personification & Choice Modelling for Demand Management with Restricted Data to be held on 26 September 2018.

Brief CV

I completed a PhD in Operational Research at the University of Southampton in 2004 and started work as a lecturer in the Operational Research group.  I was promoted to Associate Professor in March 2014. My research focuses on stochastic modelling, with two main application areas: Revenue Management and simulation modelling, principally of infectious diseases. My main interest in methodology is in finding parameter values for stochastic models.

My interest in Revenue Management started with a project where I was working with the airline bmi. We extended the working during the latter part of 2005 to consider the effect of competition on pricing of airline tickets. Since then I have worked on revenue management projects with a private healthcare company and another major UK airline and optimal pricing has become one of my major areas of interest. Recent work has included short projects with a major online retailer optimising delivery charges; and a large media company, investigating the price elasticity of advertising space.

My work in health care mainly concentrates on modelling of infectious diseases, including tuberculosis, HIV and most recently, dengue fever. In 2006 I extended much of the work that I did during my PhD and carried out some new projects, most notably one with Liz Corbett (LSHTM) using modelling to determine the impact of a reduced duration of infectiousness for TB among HIV-positives.  This work was extended further as part of Georgie Mellor's PhD project to build a stochastic model of TB in a high HIV prevalence setting, focused on Harare, Zimbabwe. I have also carried out some recent work into the global pattern of TB disease with Katy Hoad of Warwick Business School.

I began my academic life as a physicist, obtaining first class honours from Jesus College, University of Oxford in 2000.  Wanting to see more real-world action, I then proceeded to the School of Mathematics at the University of Southampton to study for an MSc in Operational Research.  I spent the summer of 2001 in Geneva, working on a project for the Stop-TB department of the World Health Organization.  The project won the OR Society's prize for the best MSc project in the UK and helped me to gain a distinction in the MSc. Continuing this project, my PhD was then partly sponsored by the Stop-TB department of the World Health Organization and supervised by Professor Russell Cheng.

Publications

An up-to-date list of publications is included on my official university home page.