A Systems Analysis of the Introduction of Unmanned Aircraft Into Aircraft Carrier Operations
Authored by Jason C Ryan, Mary L Cummings
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1109/thms.2014.2376355
Sponsors:
Office of Naval Research Science of Autonomy
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Recent advances in unmanned and autonomous vehicle technology are
accelerating the push to integrate these vehicles into environments, such as the National Airspace System, the national highway system, and
many manufacturing environments. These environments will require close
collaboration between humans and vehicles, and their large scalesmean
that real-world field trials may be difficult to execute due to concerns
of cost, availability, and technological maturity. This paper describes
the use of an agent-based model to explore the system-level effects of
unmanned vehicle implementation on the performance of these
collaborative human-vehicle environments. In particular, this paper
explores the introduction of three different unmanned vehicle control
architectures into aircraft carrier flight deck operations. The
different control architectures are tested under an examplemission
scenario using 22 aircraft. Results show that certain control
architectures can improve the rate of launches, but these improvements
are limited by the structure of flight deck operations and nature of the
launch task (which is defined independently of vehicles). Until the
launch task is improved, the effects of unmanned vehicle control
architectures on flight deck performance will be limited.
Tags
Capacity
Supervisory control