The Role of Human Causal Factors in U.S. Army Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Accidents

Author(s):  
Sharon D. Manning ◽  
Clarence E. Rash ◽  
Patricia A. LeDuc ◽  
Robert K. Noback ◽  
Joseph McKeon
2019 ◽  
pp. 295-305
Author(s):  
Jonathan Bishop

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), commonly known as drones, are a robotic form of military aircraft that are remotely operated by humans. Due to lack of situation awareness, such technology has led to the deaths of civilians through the inaccurate targeting of missile or gun attacks. This chapter presents the case for how a patented invention can be used to reduce civilian casualties through attaching an affect recognition sensor to a UAV that uses a database of strategies, tactics and commands to better instruct fighter pilots on how to respond while in combat so as to avoid misinterpreting civilians as combatants. The chapter discusses how this system, called VoisJet, can reduce many of the difficulties that come about for UAV pilots, including reducing cognitive load and opportunity for missing data. The chapter concludes that using UAVs fitted with VoisJet could allow for the reduction of the size of standing armies so that defence budgets are not overstretched outside of peacetime.


Author(s):  
Jonathan Bishop

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), commonly known as drones, are a robotic form of military aircraft that are remotely operated by humans. Due to lack of situation awareness, such technology has led to the deaths of civilians through the inaccurate targeting of missile or gun attacks. This chapter presents the case for how a patented invention can be used to reduce civilian casualties through attaching an affect recognition sensor to a UAV that uses a database of strategies, tactics and commands to better instruct fighter pilots on how to respond while in combat so as to avoid misinterpreting civilians as combatants. The chapter discusses how this system, called VoisJet, can reduce many of the difficulties that come about for UAV pilots, including reducing cognitive load and opportunity for missing data. The chapter concludes that using UAVs fitted with VoisJet could allow for the reduction of the size of standing armies so that defence budgets are not overstretched outside of peacetime.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (7) ◽  
pp. 1493-1507 ◽  
Author(s):  
Si-Jia Lu ◽  
Dongsheng Wang ◽  
Zhanyong Wang ◽  
Bai Li ◽  
Zhong-Ren Peng ◽  
...  

Akustika ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 16-21
Author(s):  
Petr Moshkov

The role of ambient noise in the problem of community noise of propeller-driven unmanned aerial vehicle is considered. The results of the author's measurements of the spectral characteristics of the background in open terrain, in the mountains, near the sea and the highway are presented. An expression is proposed for calculating the spectrum of background noise in open terrain (wind noise). It is shown that the ambient noise can be an effective noise masker of propeller-driven UAV in the low and medium frequencies.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 408-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil C Renic

The growing ability of the US to kill with impunity in war has prompted some to question whether such advantage challenges the moral justifications for inter-combatant violence. This scholarship, however, has yet to properly clarify both the explicit and tacit role of reciprocal risk within this moral determination. A systematic explanation is needed of the function of risk in the right to kill in war. This article engages with the in bello component of the Just War Tradition to determine: first, the role of reciprocal risk in the moral justifications for killing in war; and, second, the extent to which these justifications may be challenged within conditions of radical asymmetry, exemplified today by the unmanned aerial vehicle exclusive violence of the US. The first three sections of this article each review an account of Just War: conventionalism, revisionism and contractarianism. It is argued that the coherence of each of these moral accounts, particularly in terms of the permissiveness of inter-combatant violence, is grounded in an assumption of collective reciprocal risk. Radically asymmetric conditions of battle render ambiguous what would otherwise be a morally unproblematic use of military violence. This article will conclude by highlighting how this challenge manifests in practice, through analysis of the ongoing unmanned aerial vehicle exclusive violence of the US. The radical differentials of physical risk that characterise this violence threaten to erode the capacity of the US to interpret and apply standard judgements of Just War theory against those it targets.


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