Research Summaries

Back NPS Support for CY 2010-2012 Rapid Pro VIRT (RPV)

Fiscal Year 2011
Division Graduate School of Engineering & Applied Science
Department Electrical & Computer Engineering
Investigator(s) Goshorn, Rachel E.
Goshorn, Deborah E.
Sponsor Marine Corps Systems Command (Marine Corps)
Summary The Marines need ever-improving systems to find, fix and target enemies. They have adopted a rapid prototyping approach with 5 key elements: (1) an architecture for composing capabilities; (2) a set of evolving components; (3) an environment for testing and employing candidate systems; (4) a fitness function that assesses how well the candidates perform in the environment and that guides feedback; and (5) a feedback function that assures investment flows into successful components and promising new candidates. The fitness function must shape successive systems to utilize highvalue information and reduce low-productivity activities that produce or consume low-value bits. This is what our VIRT techniques address: how to assure that significant bits flow to and affect decision-makers while they have time and processing resources to exploit them. VIRT is a key aspect of the fitness function that will make the evolutionary approach converge on superior systems. This proposal aims to support MCSC Intell to implement these key elements and attain a best of breed solution to the intelligence problem that continuously evolves and improves.
Keywords
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Data Publications, theses (not shown) and data repositories will be added to the portal record when information is available in FAIRS and brought back to the portal