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The US Army seeks AI-enabled analytics in constrained environments


6 May 2021
The ability to collect, process and interpret data quickly and efficiently is vital across the broad spectrum of defence and security. However, in a world where more and more data is generated from a growing number of sources, the capability to effectively assess data information is hindered by issues such as insufficient computing power and limited bandwidth at the point of need.
Fortunately, our colleagues in the US Army have an ongoing competition that aims to address data analytics challenges, which will be of particular interest to UK defence innovators in the AI-enabled analytic space.
The xTech Global Artificial Intelligence (AI) Challenge is a two-round competition, where up to ten finalists will receive an award of $10,000 each and pitch their dual-use technologies at the Innovation Hub (I-HUB) Imperial College London this July 2021, where DASA has its London office. ....

United States , United Kingdom , City Of , Imperial College London , Us Army , Capabilities Development Command , Army For Acquisition , Department Of Defence Do , Tech Global Artificial Intelligence , Innovation Hub , United Kingdom Venture , Atlantic Area , United States Assistant Secretary , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , நகரம் ஆஃப் , ஏகாதிபத்தியம் கல்லூரி லண்டன் , எங்களுக்கு இராணுவம் , இராணுவம் க்கு கையகப்படுத்தல் , துறை ஆஃப் பாதுகாப்பு செய் , கண்டுபிடிப்பு மையம் , அட்லாண்டிக் பரப்பளவு , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் உதவியாளர் செயலாளர் ,

Army, ASU publish human-autonomy communication tips


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IMAGE: Army researchers publish a paper suggesting how future Soldiers will communicate in complex and autonomous environments.
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Credit: U.S. Army photo illustration
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. Army and Arizona State University researchers identified a set of approaches to help scientists assess how well autonomous systems and humans communicate.
These approaches build on transformational scientific research efforts led by the Army s Robotics Collaborative Technology Alliance, which evolved the state of robots from tools to teammates and laid the foundation for much of the service s existing research into how humans and robots can work together effectively.
As ideas for autonomous systems evolve, and the possibilities of ever-more diverse human-autonomy teams has become a reality; however, no clear guidelines exist to explain the best ways to assess how well humans and intelligent systems communicate, Army researchers said. ....

United States , Anthony Baker , Army Research Laboratory , Us Combat Capabilities Development , Arizona State University , Army Robotics Collaborative Technology Alliance , Robotics Collaborative Technology Alliance , Capabilities Development Command , Army Research , Human Intelligent Systems Integration , Assessing Communication , Human Autonomy Teams , Next Generation Combat Vehicle , Human Autonomy Teaming , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , அந்தோணி ரொட்டி சுடுபவர் , இராணுவம் ஆராய்ச்சி ஆய்வகம் , அரிசோனா நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , இராணுவம் ரோபாட்டிக்ஸ் கூட்டு தொழில்நுட்பம் கூட்டணி , ரோபாட்டிக்ஸ் கூட்டு தொழில்நுட்பம் கூட்டணி , இராணுவம் ஆராய்ச்சி , அடுத்தது ஜெநரேஶந் போர் வாகனம் , மனிதன் தன்னாட்சி குழு ,

DVIDS - News - Army, ASU publish human-autonomy communication tips


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ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. Army and Arizona State University researchers identified a set of approaches to help scientists assess how well autonomous systems and humans communicate.
These approaches build on transformational scientific research efforts led by the Army’s Robotics Collaborative Technology Alliance, which evolved the state of robots from tools to teammates and laid the foundation for much of the service’s existing research into how humans and robots can work together effectively.
As ideas for autonomous systems evolve, and the possibilities of ever-more diverse human-autonomy teams has become a reality; however, no clear guidelines exist to explain the best ways to assess how well humans and intelligent systems communicate, Army researchers said. ....

United States , Anthony Baker , Army Research Laboratory , Us Combat Capabilities Development , Arizona State University , Infantry Division Soldiers , Army Robotics Collaborative Technology Alliance , Robotics Collaborative Technology Alliance , Capabilities Development Command , Army Research , Human Intelligent Systems Integration , Assessing Communication , Human Autonomy Teams , Multipurpose Unmanned Tactical Transport , Next Generation Combat Vehicle , Human Autonomy Teaming , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , அந்தோணி ரொட்டி சுடுபவர் , இராணுவம் ஆராய்ச்சி ஆய்வகம் , அரிசோனா நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் , காலாட்படை பிரிவு வீரர்கள் , இராணுவம் ரோபாட்டிக்ஸ் கூட்டு தொழில்நுட்பம் கூட்டணி , ரோபாட்டிக்ஸ் கூட்டு தொழில்நுட்பம் கூட்டணி , இராணுவம் ஆராய்ச்சி , பல்நோக்கு ஆளில்லா தந்திரோபாய போக்குவரத்து , அடுத்தது ஜெநரேஶந் போர் வாகனம் ,

Mortar Systems, the "infantryman's artillery" 120mm mortar system – Soldier of Fortune Magazine


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As a turreted, light weight and remote-controlled 120mm mortar system has a high level of mobility, protection and accuracy. Patria Nemo is capable of both direct and indirect fire. One of the features makes Patria Nemo mortar system particularly advanced is its fire-on-the-move capability. Patria has originally developed the fire-on-the-move capability for Patria Nemo Navy version several years ago, but the development was taken a step further. To date, Patria has finalized the qualification of the fire-on-the-move capability on land-based systems in both direct and indirect fire missions.
Mortar systems keep pace with modernization efforts
By Ed Lopez Army ....

Matthew Terreault , Development Agreement , Army Futures , Armaments Center , Patria Nemo Navy , Mortars Division , Ed Lopez Army , Mortar Systems Branch , Us Army , Capabilities Development Command , Program Executive Office Armaments , Patria Nemo , Combat Capabilities Development Command , Cooperative Research , Stryker Brigade Combat Teams , Bland Business , Foreign Military Sales , Mortar Future Indirect Fire Turret , Extended Range Mortar , Product Manager Precision Fires , Project Manager Combat Ammunition , Joint Program Executive Office Armaments , Armored Multi Purpose Vehicle , இராணுவம் எதிர்காலங்கள் , பேட்ரீய நெமொ கடற்படை , மோட்டார் பிரிவு ,

Army is working on Frankenbots with living tissue to better robot capabilities


3 min read
      
The thought of living tissue and machinery meshed together brings up images of grotesque cyborgs and far-future sci-fi films, but at the Army Research Laboratory a robot with living, organic muscles may not be that far off.
ARL’s Combat Capabilities Development Command is teaming up with universities in North Carolina to develop studies in bio-hybrid robotics.
The idea is just as fantastical as you may be imagining. ARL wants to fuse living tissue with cold metal to build robots that may be able to gain the agility and versatility of living creatures.
“Bio-hybrid robotics as a field is very young,” Dean Culver, an ARL research scientist, told Federal News Network. “Today’s robot’s primary limitation is power, strength and versatility. They can perform limited tasks for a certain amount of time. But it’s not really on the order of magnitude that an organism can do the same thing. We still don’t have robots that can go int ....

United States , North Carolina , Army Research Laboratory , Movement Adaptation , News Network , Capabilities Development , Capabilities Development Command , Federal News , Legged Locomotion , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , வடக்கு கரோலினா , இராணுவம் ஆராய்ச்சி ஆய்வகம் , இயக்கம் வேறுபடுத்தி அமைத்தல் , செய்தி வலைப்பின்னல் , கூட்டாட்சியின் செய்தி , கால் லோகோமோஷன் ,