Marvin Kastner, M.Sc.

Adresse

Technische Universität Hamburg
Institut für Maritime Logistik
Am Schwarzenberg-Campus 4 (D)
21073 Hamburg

 

Kontaktdaten & Profile

Büro: Gebäude D Raum 5.007
Tel.: +49 40 30601 4793
E-Mail: marvin.kastner(at)tuhh.de
ORCiD: 0000-0001-8289-2943
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marvin-kastner/
ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marvin-Kastner
Google scholar: https://scholar.google.de/citations?user=lAR-oVAAAAAJ&hl=de&oi=ao
Scopus: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=57221938031



Forschungsschwerpunkte

  • analytisches und simulationsgestütztes Planen von Häfen
  • IT-gestützte Optimierung der Hafenanläufe und des Terminalbetriebs
  • Resilienz von maritimen Lieferketten und maritimen Infrastrukturen
  • Maschinelles Lernen und Business Analytics in der maritimen Logistik

Vorträge und Workshops (Auszug)

  • 26.09.2024 ein Vortrag auf der Hamburg International Conference of Logistics (HICL): "Hinterland rail connectivity of seaport container terminals" mit den Koautoren Owais Ahmed Shaikh, Yasser Shaikh und Anish Sundar Gowthaman
  • 06.05.2024 ein Workshop an der Graduiertenakademie der TUHH: "Einführung in Jupyter Notebooks" [mehr]
  • 25.01.2023 ein Vortrag auf dem 7. Suderburger Logistik-Forum: "KI-unterstützte Planung von Güterumschlaganlagen am Beispiel von Containerterminals"
  • 15.09.2022 ein Vortrag bei den MLE-Days 2022: "Synthetische Daten für das Reinforcement-Learning bei Container-Terminal-Steuerungen"
  • 28.06.2022 ein Workshop an der Graduiertenakademie der TUHH: "Einführung in Jupyter Notebooks" [mehr]
  • 02.07.2021 ein Workshop bei den MLE-Days 2021: "Methoden des Maschinellen Lernens in der Maritimen Logistik" [zip]
  • 16.03.2021 ein Workshop an der Graduiertenakademie der TUHH: "Einführung in Jupyter Notebooks" [mehr]
  • 30.11.2020 im Rahmen der Vortragsreihe "Train Your Engineering Network" der MLE-Initiative: "How to Talk About Machine Learning with Jupyter Notebooks" [mehr]
  • 22.11.2019 auf der DISRUPT NOW! AI for Hamburg: "Künstliche Intelligenz in der maritimen Wirtschaft" [mehr]
  • 29.10.2019 im Rahmen der forschungsbörse: "Maritime Logistik - Ein Rundumschlag" [mehr]
  • 23.10.2019 bei der Open Access Week 2019 an der TUHH: "Datenanalyse - Offener Workshop: Daten auswerten und visualisieren mit Jupyter Notebooks" [mehr] [git]
  • 16.11.2018 beim GI DevCamp Hamburg: "Mobility Research and GDPR"
  • 27.09.2018 beim SGKV AK zum Thema Lkw-Ankünfte: "Prognoseverfahren und neuronale Netze – Was ist möglich?"


Veröffentlichungen (Auszug)

2025

[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

2024

[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

2023
[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

2022
[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

2021
[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

2020
[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

2019
[192106]
Title: Addressing Challenges in Creating Traffic Profiles for Transshipment Hubs in Seaports. <em>Logistics and Maritime Systems: 12th International Conference on Logistics and Maritime Systems (LOGMS 2024) - Proceedings</em>
Written by: Gupta, Shubhangi and Kastner, Marvin and Vieira, João and Jahn, Carlos
in: (2024).
Volume: Number:
on pages: [IN PRINT]
Chapter:
Editor: In Voß, Stefan and Heilig, Leonard (Eds.)
Publisher: Springer:
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Address: Germany
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.34646.51520
URL: https://easychair.org/publications/preprint/glmV
ARXIVID:
PMID:

[www]

Note: conflowgen

Abstract: Globalization has significantly increased containerized traffic, driven by the rising demand for swift cargo movements at low cost. When creating cost- and time-efficient maritime transport networks, transshipment hubs are of high importance. There, containers are moved from one vessel to another. This enables carriers to design hub-and-spoke networks(where feeder vessels serve the spokes and deep sea vessels interconnect the hubs) as well as connecting deep sea services by interlining. Hubs are often located along major shipping routes and are concentrated near canals and straits. The successful operation of transshipment hubs relies on various socio-economic factors, trade policies, and robust infrastructure. When making strategic decisions, simulation is often used to estimate the impact of each viable option on terminal performance. Such simulation studies heavily depend on suitable synthetic traffic profiles that reflect the workload and yard occupancy of transshipment hubs over a longer time horizon. Past work has shown that for transshipment hubs, the expected average yard occupancy is approximated over the course of several weeks, which increases the runtime of simulation studies. The approach presented in this paper addresses this issue by modifying the code of library ConFlowGen and applying it on three use cases. The results show that the traffic profiles generated with the modified code are more suitable for simulating operations of transshipment hubs. Several traffic profile characteristics are discussed, that are difficult to satisfy at the same time.

Reviewing (Auszug)

  • Flexible Services and Manufacturing Journal
  • IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
  • International Journal of Production Research
  • Simulation Modelling Practice and Theory
  • Transportation research. Part E: Logistics and Transportation