NRC Research Associate Programs
Fellowships Office
Policy and Global Affairs

Participating Agencies

RAP opportunity at Air Force Research Laboratory     AFRL

Heterogeneous Teaming for Target Search and Tracking

Location

Munitions Directorate, RW/Weapons Engagement

opportunity location
13.45.04.C0225 Eglin Air Force Base, FL 325426810

Advisers

name email phone
Emily Doucette emily.doucette@us.af.mil 850.883.0874

Description

The utilization of autonomous agents can support mission success in dynamic, uncertain, and contested environments by augmenting human operator capabilities. Specifically, cooperative autonomous systems can provide enhanced situational awareness, which can inform decision support for multi-target search, track, and engagement scenarios. To leverage the full capabilities of autonomous agents in a dynamic and uncertain battlefield, a common framework to rapidly update situational awareness and task assignments between all agents, both human and autonomous, is required.

This need for enhanced situational awareness across a team is also challenged by dynamic and uncertain information and communication topologies in decentralized command and control architectures. It has been shown that communicating the uncertainty of an autonomous team’s estimate of the state of the environment enables a human operator to make more informed and risk-aware decisions.  As such, the bi-directional communication of the uncertainty of information passed between agents and the ability to update one's own world model is vital to a shared understanding. The goal of this research is to address the aforementioned challenges to enable the synergistic teaming of heterogeneous agents to search for, track, and engage multiple targets in complex, contested, and dynamic environments.

Addressing such challenges requires a multi-disciplinary approach including but not limited to (1) probabilistic methods for target state prediction and multi-agent control, (2) graph theoretic representations of communication and command topologies, (3) optimization techniques to aid in mission planning given the predicted target set and the individual and joined state information within an autonomous team, and (4) experimental demonstrations of proposed techniques.

key words
estimation; control; autonomous; task assignment; human-machine teaming

Eligibility

Citizenship:  Open to U.S. citizens
Level:  Open to Postdoctoral and Senior applicants

Stipend

Base Stipend Travel Allotment Supplementation
$80,000.00 $5,000.00

$3,000 Supplement for Doctorates in Engineering & Computer Science

Experience Supplement:
Postdoctoral and Senior Associates will receive an appropriately higher stipend based on the number of years of experience past their PhD.

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