Title :
Patch Models and Their Applications to Multivehicle Command and Control
Author :
Rao, Venkatesh G. ; D´Andrea, Raffaello
Author_Institution :
Xerox Wilson Center for Res. & Technol., Webster, NY
fDate :
6/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We introduce patch models, a computational modeling formalism for multivehicle combat domains, based on spatiotemporal abstraction methods developed in the computer science community. The framework yields models that are expressive enough to accommodate nontrivial controlled vehicle dynamics while being within the representational capabilities of common artificial intelligence techniques used in the construction of autonomous systems. The framework allows several key design requirements of next-generation network-centric command and control systems, such as maintenance of shared situation awareness, to be achieved. Major features include support for multiple situation models at each decision node and rapid mission plan adaptation. We describe the formal specification of patch models and our prototype implementation, i.e., Patchworks. The capabilities of patch models are validated through a combat mission simulation in Patchworks, which involves two defending teams protecting a camp from an enemy attacking team
Keywords :
command and control systems; control engineering computing; formal specification; military vehicles; mobile robots; multi-robot systems; path planning; artificial intelligence techniques; combat mission simulation; computational modeling formalism; computer science community; controlled vehicle dynamics; formal specification; multivehicle command and control systems; next-generation network-centric command; patch models; rapid mission plan adaptation; spatio-temporal abstraction methods; Application software; Artificial intelligence; Command and control systems; Computational modeling; Computer science; Formal specifications; Next generation networking; Prototypes; Spatiotemporal phenomena; Vehicle dynamics; Autonomous systems; command and control; multivehicle systems; network-centric warfare; Algorithms; Artificial Intelligence; Computer Simulation; Models, Theoretical; Motor Vehicles; War;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part B: Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSMCB.2007.891254