The Autonomous Systems Test and Evaluation Working Group

Insight ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-31
Author(s):  
Jack Ring ◽  
Thomas Tenorio
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Clark ◽  
Kris Kearns ◽  
Jim Overholt ◽  
Kerianne Gross ◽  
Bart Barthelemy ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
H Figueiredo ◽  
D Cook ◽  
W Biggs

Intelligent autonomous systems (IAS) are set to become a feature of future defence programmes, and their introduction will pose challenges to traditional systems engineering and acquisition practice. Whilst the need for operational and technical assurance will endure, the need to manage programmes that deliver iteratively and which are continually evolving requires fresh thinking. New increments may well be undergoing acceptance testing against a backdrop of continual developments to higher level concepts of operation – there may be no stable baseline. Furthermore, the unbounded and potentially non-deterministic nature of IAS means testing alone is unlikely to provide satisfactory assurance, especially for systems that are able to learn from previous mission data. Lastly, at the very core of what is referred to as human-autonomy teaming is a notion of trust by the operator of the IAS, a trust which builds through development, integration, training and deployment, implying a blurring of boundaries between that which is technical assurance and that which is operational. In response to these challenges, QinetiQ are investing in UK test and evaluation infrastructure and developing, with partners, approaches that will mitigate the risks posed by these new technologies. As outlined in this paper, these include distributed live, virtual and constructive facilities, brokered policy enforcement by software and developing a body of trusted software components. The paper argues how these developments address the identified challenges, highlighting remaining gaps and drawing on evidence from ongoing UK MOD research and development; it concludes with the approaching investment and programmatic choices that will need to be made to ensure best-for-enterprise outcomes.


1975 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 21-26

An ideal definition of a reference coordinate system should meet the following general requirements:1. It should be as conceptually simple as possible, so its philosophy is well understood by the users.2. It should imply as few physical assumptions as possible. Wherever they are necessary, such assumptions should be of a very general character and, in particular, they should not be dependent upon astronomical and geophysical detailed theories.3. It should suggest a materialization that is dynamically stable and is accessible to observations with the required accuracy.


1979 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 349-355
Author(s):  
R.W. Milkey

The focus of discussion in Working Group 3 was on the Thermodynamic Properties as determined spectroscopically, including the observational techniques and the theoretical modeling of physical processes responsible for the emission spectrum. Recent advances in observational techniques and theoretical concepts make this discussion particularly timely. It is wise to remember that the determination of thermodynamic parameters is not an end in itself and that these are interesting chiefly for what they can tell us about the energetics and mass transport in prominences.


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