Georgia Tech to develop roadmap for testing and evaluating unmanned and autonomous systems

Article Tools

The Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) has won a contract to support development of a roadmap designed to improve the testing and evaluation of unmanned and autonomous systems for the U.S. Office of the Secretary of Defense. "The field of unmanned and autonomous systems is evolving rapidly, and new techniques are needed to effectively test and evaluate the capabilities that are being inserted into these systems. This is especially challenging for systems that are increasing in levels of autonomy," said Lora Weiss, a GTRI principal research engineer. "Our task is to develop a roadmap that identifies new approaches to testing autonomous systems and details what needs to be tested, how the autonomous technologies can be tested, and when the testing needs to occur."

Known as the Roadmap Development and Technology Insertion Plan (RD-TIP), the one-year $430,000 award is funded through the U.S. Army at White Sands Missile Range. The initiative is headed by Derrick Hinton, T&E/S&T program manager, with the Test Resources Management Center in the U.S. Department of Defense.

"Many new technologies are being developed for unmanned and autonomous systems that must be tested and evaluated before they can be deployed. New approaches are needed for testing and measuring the robustness of these systems, especially in non-deterministic and evolving environments," Weiss noted. "The only way to know how to test them is to understand both the details of the technology and the system that it is going into. GTRI has extensive experience in both areas and can uniquely couple fundamental research with warfighter systems."

The effort will address all five major unmanned and autonomous systems domains, including systems that operate in the air, on the ground, underwater, on the sea surface and in space. The roadmap will address both vehicles and the socio-technical environments in which they operate.

The unmanned systems test and evaluation project is a new area within the Test and Evaluation Science and Technology Program, which is sponsored by the Test Resource Management Center within the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

GTRI has ongoing projects in four areas of the T&E Science and Technology Program: unmanned and autonomous systems, directed energy, net-centric systems and non-intrusive instrumentation.

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.


Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus


Latest Issue

Features:

View Entire Issue

Most Popular Stories

Resources

Special Coverage

CTIA Wireless IT & Entertainment 2010

Read the latest from the show...