DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY AREA PLAN DTOs
INFORMATION SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY

IS.01.01 Consistent Battlespace Understanding. This DTO will provide warfighters with critical, tailored battlespace information including enemy, friendly, temporal, and spatial information, while maintaining consistency of view across echelons, joint unit types, and battlespace position. The intent is to speed understanding and organize, fuse, assess quality, deconflict, handle uncertainty, and present information to ensure thorough situation and battlespace understanding.

This DTO overcomes current limitations in the management and display of complex tactical information and addresses problems associated with differing perceptions of battlespace status; the depiction of aging, conflicting or uncertain data; data omissions; and depth of understanding. It facilitates rapid, effective decisions, resulting in improved force synchronization, reduced casualties, and faster realization of operational objectives. Required technologies include geo-information systems, uncertainty visualization, spatial- and temporal-based reasoning, knowledge bases, constraint-based and goal-directed reasoning, improved hardware performance, MMI innovations (3D/4D virtual and augmented reality, speech understanding, natural language and gesture/touch recognition, 3D audio, etc.), distributed/collaborative situation assessment, intelligent sentinels for alerts, mathematical modeling, and automatic target recognition.

During FY97, the program will develop and demonstrate case-based situation assessment tools and smart presentations depicting uncertainty, discontinuities, and temporal and spatial anomalies. It will address the issue of data quality due to sensor fidelity, reporting dropouts, network latency, etc. The FY98 goal is to develop and demonstrate a Joint Task Force battlespace awareness and visualization capability providing a consistent, accurate, comprehensive, and timely battlespace picture (C2, intelligence, logistics, weather, obstacle, etc.). This picture will provide selectable detail and resolution and remote information links to continuously acquire and fuse multisensor/multimedia data with levels of uncertainty. By FY99, the program will demonstrate automated, integrated situation assessment and display applications, in addition to adding automated data validation and representation; intelligent agents for information retrieval, filtering, deconfliction, and mission-tailored presentation; and large, distributed databases. By FY00, the goal is to complete integration of automated capabilities across services and disciplines (maneuver, air-strike, naval, (littoral), intelligence, communication, transport, etc.) and demonstrate these capabilities in joint exercises, proving the ability to access and employ foreign, digitized/nondigitized, or commercial data for military purposes. The FY01 goal is to incorporate image understanding and multilingual speech and text understanding for joint and coalition operations worldwide. By FY02, the program will demonstrate fully automated situation assessment applications which fuse, assess, and innovatively present enemy intent and potential actions based on knowledge bases, encoded doctrine, constraint-based reasoning, and fused historical, political and military databases of regional activities; and will provide 3D/4D immersive interfaces to aid and speed cognition.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. John Respass
US Army CECOM
(908) 532-0102
Dr. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
castorvl@acq.osd.mil
CAPT Williams (Third Fleet)
Col Ranne (Air Combat CMD)
(804) 764-2279
COL Alexander (XVIII ABC)
COL Baribeau (TPIO ABCS)
Dr. Dave Signori
DARPA
(703) 696-2235
dsignori@darpa.mil

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603760ECCC-0215.210.08.05.0000
0603772A1013.53.74.34.33.700
0602232N


0.40.50.60.7000
0602232N


0.50.50.60.70.70.70
0602232N


0.30.50.50.30.30.30
0603617F23210.4 0.61.00.60.300
0603789F23350.5 0.500000
Total20.816.215.011.65.01.00

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.02.01 Forecasting, Planning, and Resource Allocation. The goal of this DTO is to provide warfighters with a proactive planning process to avoid direct conflict and to be prepared to act and react should conflict prove inevitable. This will be achieved through coordinated actions prior to the commencement of battle, or the next phase of the battle. The forecasting, planning, and resource allocation (FPRA) program provides warfighters with the ability to fuse and assess data, generate constraint/goal-based options and alternatives, plan the allocation and assignment of resources to shape expected actions within the enemy's decision cycle, reduce planning cycle times, and deny the enemy the time and means to respond with a counterattack plan. This DTO will reduce casualties and fratricide, provide rapid battle-activity response, and reduce by 50% overall planning/replanning time.

By FY97, FRPA will provide products to serve as a model for lower echelon mission planning systems. By FY98, the program will develop and demonstrate an automated real-time capability to analyze and select alternative courses of action, construct and analyze forecasts, prioritize critical objectives, and develop plans to permit rapid rehearsal and evaluation of battlespace options. This development includes collaborative distributed planning and scheduling, negotiation, automated target/shooter pairing, problem detection and alerting, and interactive wargaming as an integral part of the rehearsal process. By FY99, FRPA will reduce the in-theater footprint of the Joint Force Air Component Command Air Operations Center by 60%. Planning will leverage the development of intelligent agents to initiate and sustain planning and forecasting. The FY00 goal is to reduce Tanker/Airlift Control Center staff by 40%, employ automated templates for generic mission planning, and utilize advanced knowledge bases for recognizing and predicting friendly and enemy force patterns and activities. FPRA will enable constraint/goal-based automated plan development for the CJTF, including collaborative development of multimedia operations orders and fragmentation orders, automated route planning for fighting and supporting units, and automated ISR/SEAD planning for ground, sea, and air-based platforms. Required technologies include modeling and simulation tied to geo-information systems, uncertainty visualization, spatial- and temporal-based reasoning, resource conflict resolution, knowledge bases, neural nets, Petri nets, constraint-based and goal-directed reasoning, improved speed and capacity hardware, MMI innovations, real-time distributed/collaborative planning and negotiation, intelligent agents for alerts and for data mining, search and retrieval, and mathematical modeling.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. John Respass
US Army CECOM
(908) 532-0102
Dr. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
castorvl@acq.osd.mil
CAPT Moffat (CAG CVW3)
CAPT Williams (Third Fleet)
Col Ranne (Air Combat CMD)
(804) 764-2279
COL Alexander (XVIII ABC)
COL Baribeau (TPIO ABCS)
COL Wolfgram (RBV ACTD)
Dr. Dave Signori
DARPA
(703) 696-2235
dsignori@darpa.mil

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602301EST-117.510.45.05.05.05.05.0
0602702ETT-036.88.76.60000
0603761ECST-012.02.000000
0603772A1013.53.74.34.33.700
0602782A7791.72.62.92.93.000
0602232N


0.11.00.90.90.90.90
0603789F23350.4 0.40.20.30.300
0603782F25322.11.81.81.92.02.02.1
0603617F23210.40.61.11.30.600
0602702F55811.91.91.61.92.22.32.4
0603794N


1.21.20.80000
Total27.734.425.218.417.610.39.5

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.03.01 Integrated Force and Execution Management. IFEM will provide warfighters with the ability to monitor, control, and coordinate real-time events inappropriate or impractical for traditional planning and forecasting activities; the ability to accomplish dynamic, continuous synchronization of operations through collaborative execution monitoring, plan-repair, and retasking of shared assets across echelons, missions, and forces; and knowledge-based cues for rules of engagement in offensive, defensive, evasive, and deceptive actions. IFEM directly supports the JWSTP objectives for Information Superiority, Joint Readiness and Logistics, and Precision Force. IFEM will implement a capability to perform enhanced wargaming at faster-than-real time. Required technologies and metrics are similar to those addressed by DTOs IS.01 and IS.02.

During FY97, the program will develop and demonstrate real-time, single-echelon execution monitoring tools that display a deviation from plans, and provide automated recommendations for constraint-based or goal-based actions to "get back on track." It will demonstrate en-route/in-stride capabilities that permit similar flexibility afforded encamped forces, and identify and preview modified routes, alternative targets, and threats impacting a repaired plan. By FY98, IFEM will demonstrate the capability to monitor multiple-echelon plans, and perform real-time plan deconfliction across missions and near-real-time battle damage assessment. FY99 goals are to provide automated implementation of tactical contingency plans and synchronization with other ongoing elements; to provide collaborative execution monitoring among echelons and forces, incorporate uncertainty measures into plan repair functions, and integrate decision support for ISR and logistics operations linked with the ongoing battle; and to develop the capability to incorporate signature/spectrum management and the effects of sensor position options into the ongoing battle. By FY00, IFEM will demonstrate in-stride retasking/retargeting/weaponeering for multiple, dispersed units, including collaborative sensor detect/track, automated target assignment and engagement, and cooperative engagement and target handoff. By FY01/02, the program will provide four-dimensional representation of battle execution management. Fully coordinated operations across the force will result in faster adjustment of mission plans, a reduction in casualties and fratricide, and an improvement in force synchronization.

Required technologies include advanced applications such as modeling and simulation tied to geo-information systems, uncertainty visualization, spatial- and temporal-based reasoning, multivariable conflict resolution, knowledge bases, neural nets, Petri nets, constraint-based and goal-directed reasoning, improved speed and capacity hardware, display and MMI innovations, real-time distributed/collaborative planning and negotiation, intelligent agents for alerts and for data mining, search and retrieval, and mathematical modeling, real-time geo-referenced imagery, ATR and intent analysis, nodal analysis, etc.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. John Respass
US Army CECOM
(908) 532-0102
Dr. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
castorvl@acq.osd.mil
CAPT Moffat (CAG CVW3)
CAPT Williams (Third Fleet)
Col Ranne (Air Combat CMD)
(804) 764-2279
COL Alexander (XVIII ABC)
COL Baribeau (TPIO ABCS)

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603772A1013.53.74.34.33.700
0602782A7791.72.63.03.03.000
0602232N


1.62.21.70.80.30.30
0603617F23211.11.31.41.30.800
0603789F23350.10.10.81.31.800
Total8.09.911.210.79.60.30

IS.10.01 Simulation Interconnection. The goal of this DTO is to facilitate the interoperability of simulations. The program will provide users the capability to connect diverse joint and component simulations, in a composable fashion, to support the functional areas of training, acquisition, and analysis. The major technical challenges include establishing the architectural design, protocols and standards, and security to facilitate the interoperability of simulations; developing the supporting infrastructure software to apply the architecture to simulation application with the needed levels of performance; and extension of the architecture to provide advanced time management, data distribution, and federation management services.

In FY97, the program will develop first-generation runtime infrastructure, develop and test initial prototype object model development software, investigate innovative techniques for supporting scaleable executing systems using a high-level architecture (HLA), and develop an automated high-level architecture compliance testing capability. Runtime infrastructure capabilities will represent a 20% improvement in performance over proof-of-concept prototypes, and development tools will reduce object model development time by 25%. In FY98, the program will design and develop innovative industry-based runtime infrastructure software demonstrating increased performance (25% improvement) and broad-based portability (reduce cost of porting by 25%); extend HLA services to address user needs in advanced time, data distribution, and federation management (increasing user base by 10%); and demonstrate technologies to support larger scale federations (10% increase). FY99 goals include development of prototype for initial automated tools to support federation development (reducing time to create a new federation by 20%), and advanced system planning and runtime management tools to support the efficient operation of large-scale applications (20% less manpower). In FY00, increased advanced integrated automation will be applied to federation development and operation, demonstrating additional (20%) reduced costs to create a new federation. In FY01, runtime infrastructure advances using next-generation software and hardware will demonstrate increases (20%) in performance for the same cost, using readily available COTS software to replace 50% of custom software. In FY02, advanced support software will demonstrate automation of the end-to-end process of identifying candidate simulations; defining runtime data exchange requirements, network and computer resource requirements, configuration, operation, and monitoring of federation operation; and demonstrating a substantial decrease (50%) in time and manpower to support user application.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. Judith Dahmann
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
Mr. Gary Yerace
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
COL Henry Ruth
USAMSOA
(703) 784-0006
CAPT Jay Kistler
DONMSMO
(703) 695-8206
LtCol Rick Eisiminger
MCMSMO
(703) 784-2541
LtCol Mark Cluskey
XOMW
(202) 761-4442
CAPT Sam Collins
JWFC
(804) 726-6432
CAPT Drew Beasley
JSIMS JPO
(407) 696-2238

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603238DP47620.122.510.59.39.49.510.6
Total20.122.510.59.39.49.510.6

IS.11.01 Simulation Information Technologies. The goal of this DTO is to provide the services and government agencies the ability to develop simulations that provide consistent and reliable results, through the development of common conceptual models of the mission space (CMMS) using authoritative representations. Common syntax and semantics will be developed to specify the warfighter mission (the entities, their actions and interactions) to the simulation developer, and to formulate and define standard data structures, dictionaries, and enumeration of complex modeling and simulation (M&S) data (e.g., highly derived data, command hierarchies, artifacts of legacy systems). This objective includes the development of an M&S resource repository; and joint verification, validation, and accreditation/certification (VV&A VV&C) standards and guidelines. Developing coherent, complete, and consistent CMMS is an extensive task. DoD M&S spans a wide range of missions, from conventional to other-than-war missions; and M&S applications, from system acquisition activities to mission planning and rehearsal. The distributed and interactive nature of advanced M&S capability and security concerns makes the standardization and ready availability of standardized data an extremely complex technical concern.

In FY97, the initial prototype of CMMS will be developed and will demonstrate distributed data collection for Joint Task Force-level exercises. In FY97/FY98, prototype conceptual models of the mission space will be available for use by the Joint Simulation System, Warrior Simulation 2000, National Air Space Model, and the Joint Warfare Simulation. The M&S VV&A recommended practices guide will be published. Pilot studies on the impact of security policies will be completed. Pilot studies of M&S VV&C procedures and guidelines will be initiated. The FY98 goal is an improved simulation infrastructure for 50,000 object exercises generating 500 GB of data. By FY99, the program will implement improved representations of synthetic environments in an updated compact terrain database format. Techniques for modeling complex data structures initiated in FY96 will be demonstrated and completed in FY00. By the FY00 timeframe, at least 50% of the major simulation program developers will have contributed to population of the CMMS. Conceptual models of the mission space will be used by the warfighter in validating doctrine, functions, tactics, techniques, and procedures. By FY02 and beyond, CMMS will represent DoD activities, and warfighters will have worldwide access to conceptual models of DoD processes. These new capabilities are focused on supporting modeling and simulation system developers in providing operationally valid, consistent representations of functional roles and relationships. These efforts will specifically support the Synthetic Theater of War ACTD.

Service/Agency POCService/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Col Mark Jefferson
MAJ Steve Zeswitz
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
Mr. W. H. (Dell) Lunceford
DARPA
(703) 696-2238
Mr. Gary Yerace
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
CAPT Drew Beasley
JSIMS JPO
(407) 696-2238

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603761ECST-016.713.012.90000
0602702ETT-061.9000000
Total S&T8.613.012.90000
0603832D*P47615.116.719.519.721.322.922.9
Total23.729.732.419.721.322.922.9

* Non-S&T funds.

IS.12.01 Simulation Representation. This DTO will enhance the realism of models and simulations used in military training, acquisition, and analysis by providing authoritative representations of (1) static and dynamic, natural, and man-made environments, and related effects on human and system performance; (2) the performance and capabilities of warfighting systems and their effects on natural and man-made environments; and (3) human behavior (individual and group). Representations of the terrain, ocean, atmosphere, and space are often at a large data volume with great diversity, accounting for large numbers of significant conditions and effects. Major challenges include rapid database generation and near-real-time interaction of consistent and correlated representations. The representation of human behavior must reflect the effects of the capabilities, limitations, and conditions that influence human behavior (e.g., morale, stress, fatigue). Providing variable human behavior for friendly, enemy, and non-hostile forces—to include computer-generated forces (CGFs) that exhibit platform-based behavioral modeling and command forces (CFOR) models through division level—remains a significant challenge.

In FY97/FY98, this DTO will provide (1) a capability to rapidly generate terrain databases for a 2,500-km2 area to support a 72-hour crisis rehearsal; (2) enhanced system representations, under development by the services; (3) tools and technical methods used to acquire knowledge and better represent human (individual and group) behavior; and (4) extend CFOR command entities to battalion level and demonstrate the rapid generation of CGF adaptive behaviors. FY99/01 developments will include (1) the capability to generate and interchange integrated consistent synthetic environments (terrain, oceans, atmosphere, and space) at multiple resolution within 72 hours; (2) representations of the effects of human C2 decision-making processes in company- and battalion-level surrogates, and providing more variable, less deterministic individual and group behaviors. In the FY02+ timeframe, DTO-developed tools will enable dynamic, scaleable (micro to macro) adjustments to the synthetic environmental representations in simulations running in real time, and representations of the C2 decision-making process will be extended to the brigade, division, and corps surrogate levels.

These efforts will specifically support the Synthetic Theater of War (STOW 97) ACTD and joint modeling and simulation system developments like JSIMS, JWARS, JCOS, JLOTS, improved CGFs, and C4ISR interfaces, as well as DoD's battlefield visualization program. Coordination of efforts is essential with the Sensors, Electronics and Battlespace Environment technology area, and the Rapid Battlefield Visualization (RBV), Battlefield Awareness and Data Dissemination (BADD), and STOW ACTDs.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Col Mark Jefferson
MAJ Steve Zeswitz
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
CAPT Drew Beasley
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
COL Henry Ruth
JSIMS JPO
(407) 696-2238
CDR D. McBride
ONR/NRL
(703) 696-0360
Mr. Walter Zimmmers
DSWA
(703) 325-1135
Jim Metzger
OSD(PA&E)
(703) 602-3675
Mr. Don Ressio
USAE WES
((601) 634-3999

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602715HAB3.13.43.745.67.49.4
0602308AC900.80.80.80.80.900
Total S&T3.94.24.54.86.57.49.4
0603832D*P47617.725.837.440.741.241.141.9
Total21.630.041.945.547.748.551.3

*Non-S&T funds.

IS.13.01 Simulation Interfaces. This DTO will provide simulation interfaces for the seamless integration and composability of federations of modeling and simulation (M&S) applications with live systems, instrumented systems on test and training ranges, and humans. This critical capability will facilitate the use of M&S in providing consistent battlespace understanding, integrated force management, and predictive planning (Reference DTOs IS.01, .02, and .03) and will augment the decision-making process. Two of the primary advantages are the ability to take M&S to war and to train as you intend to fight (i.e., using M&S to provide realistic loads on operational C4I systems). This technology will facilitate the use of M&S in mission rehearsal; provide additional information to operational planners on weapons effects, sensor capabilities, etc.; provide additional insights/analysis regarding operational plans, potential dangers, conflicts, losses, and effectiveness; enhance distributed, collaborative planning; provide live system processes and activity representations in simulation exercises; represent simulated entities to operational live systems; and represent warfighters in distributed simulations. Four classes of interactions between C4I systems and simulations will be demonstrated: (1) C4I as a stimulator, (2) C4I system as a viewer, (3) live C4I player, and (4) virtual C4I player. Common operational modeling planning and simulation strategy (COMPASS) services (collaborative session management, geo-registered overlay management, analysis, composite mission preview, and simulated mission rehearsal capabilities) will focus on the first two classes, while the development of a Modular Reconfigurable C4I Interface (MRCI) will focus on the latter two. Technical challenges include (1) modular interfaces that are responsive, easily reconfigurable for multiple like or heterogeneous live systems (as opposed to bilateral interfaces), and compliant with the JTA and the M&S common technical framework; (2) the accurate representation of live platforms and humans in a simulation; and (3) realistic presentation of synthetic forces to live platforms and humans.

In FY97, the program will demonstrate an HLA-compliant prototype MRCI for a few C4 systems (AFATDS, MCS, CTAPS). By FY98, MRCI will be further developed to support larger numbers of C4I systems. Interfaces are planned for JSIMS and GCCS. In FY98, the goal is to demonstrate a 100% increase in USMTF, VMF, and TACFIRE message set size, and to integrate MRCI capability and COMPASS services to develop a comprehensive set of M&S services within DII COE Version 3.0. In FY99-01, the program will expand upon the success of the MRCI to develop bidirectional reconfigurable interfaces to other live weapons and sensor systems and test and training ranges. In FY02, the goal is to initiate development of reconfigurable simulation interfaces to support the full immersion of humans into the synthetic environment.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Col Mark Jefferson
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
Mr. Gary Yerace
DMSO
(703) 998-0660
COL Henry Ruth
USAMSAA
(410) 278-4107
Capt Jay Kistler
DONMSMO
(703) 695-8206
CAPT Drew Beasley
JSIMS JPO
(407) 696-2238
LtCol Mark Cluskey
XOMW
(202) 761-4442

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603832D*P4766.36.17.17.37.47.57.6
Total6.36.17.17.37.47.57.6

*Non-S&T funds.

IS.15.01 Assured Distributed Environment Support. This DTO will develop and demonstrate a globally distributed, heterogeneous information infrastructure to provide warfighters at all echelons immediate and location-transparent access to information. It may be derived from multi-terabyte databases spread over a thousand nodes, and involve execution and sharing of up to one-half million processes, supporting all phases of mission planning and execution. This allows users to craft their C4I information environment from the full set of assets connected through the grid. It will be dynamically reconfigurable to accommodate crisis loads, outages, or changes in information needs, and will support collaboration among all elements of planning, decision making, and execution monitoring and assessment including information discovery and retrieval in massive, heterogeneous, distributed environments. The information infrastructure will support deployed operations with a small footprint and maximum reach-back to in-garrison resources, and provide for the seamless integration of processing and communications systems, plus associated information services and applications as described in the Advanced Battlespace Information System (ABIS). This DTO relates to DTOs A.13 and IS.21. By FY97, the program will demonstrate heterogeneous, distributed computing (involving up to 30 nodes over three heterogeneous wide-area networks) incorporating multimedia data, shared-context collaboration, video conferencing, and intelligent-agent-based data acquisition over wide-area networks. By FY98, the goal is to demonstrate incorporation of mobile computing nodes into the infrastructure. This includes operation over combat net radio (4,800 b/s) bandwidth, more error-prone communication channels, protocols to allow entry/departure (within 2 minutes) and re-entry into the configuration, and resource management mechanisms to allow allocation and binding of 1,000 processes and associated data across the hybrid fixed/mobile configuration. The FY99 goal is to implement up to four virtual, collaborating, planning teams with shared access to up to six collaborative planning domains, with full traceability from strategy to task. By FY00-FY03, the program will demonstrate adaptive reconfiguration of a 100-node infrastructure to support dynamic crisis response. Technical barriers include system state management to support dynamic reconfigurability for the formation of virtual collaboration teams; scalability of resource control mechanisms for up to 10,000 objects across 100 nodes; algorithms to maintain quality-of-service parameters across a widely disparate communications backbone; and dynamic binding of heterogeneous processes and databases across multicluster infrastructure.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. Les C. Anderson
USN NRaD Code 411
(619) 553-4139
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSDDR&E
(703) 614-0207
COL Maris McCrabb
USAF/ACC/DRV
(757) 764-8800
Dr. Dave Signori
DARPA
(703) 696-2235
COL Douglas MacGregor
USA/BCBL
(913) 684-4523
Dr. Ronald Knudsen
SPAWAR PD15A
(703) 602-1006

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602301EST-196.95.200000
0603760ECCC-019.55.000000
0603761ECST-0213.04.000000
0602702F55813.02.32.21.71.81.91.9
0603728F25301.91.31.50.90.71.21.2
0602232N


2.83.14.04.04.04.04.0
0602783A0941.61.800000
Total38.722.77.76.66.57.17.1

IS.17.01 Defensive Information Warfare. This DTO will develop and demonstrate technology to provide a degree of control in information functions found in processes and applications above the transport layer that permit friendly forces to operate at a given time and place without prohibitive interference by the opposing force. The program will develop and demonstrate technology to guarantee availability and integrity of the information system to support the warfighter in a dynamic battlefield environment; monitor the system health relative to an objective policy, and modify allocation of resources to accommodate any changes or anomalous behavior; provide graceful degradation of performance for system under attack, and ensure that depleted resources are dynamically allocated the highest priority mission support; and increase the number and type of faults the information system can tolerate, and minimize recovery time and residual effects of the recover mechanisms. This DTO supports A.04, A.12, and IS.21.

By FY97, the goal is to complete a tool for white-box security evaluation with respect to a threat model. By FY98, the program will release a library of application-embedded network security services; a commercial (B3) certified workstation featuring trued computing base; and prototype CORBA-compliant domain and type enforcement for secure location interoperability. It also will demonstrate integrated security support in prototype extensible operating system; complete design tools for inferring system-level properties in composed systems; demonstrate a primitive survivable immune system for responding to attacks and intrusions; and demonstrate resource allocation mechanisms for an adaptive system of systems. FY99-FY01 goals are to demonstrate a suite of secure, reliable distributed applications over mobile and wireless networks; demonstrate integration of security composition techniques into software engineering tools; demonstrate adaptive architecture for survivable system of systems; and develop techniques for diagnosing multiagent multistaged attack. FY00-01 goals include completing prototype network management implementation for crisis-mode operation; demonstrating techniques for general three-way tradeoffs among fault tolerance, real time, and security; applying assurance and evaluation tools to secure fault-tolerant operating systems and network services; and demonstrating and red-teaming survivable architecture integrating adaptive protocols, immune system technologies, and secure distributed services. The primary technical barrier here is assuring the confidentiality and integrity of data at multiple classification levels in systems accessed by users with different clearances and need-to-know.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. Howard Frank
DARPA/ITO
(703) 696-2228
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSDDR&E
(703) 614-0207
COL Maris McCrabb
USAF/ACC/DRV
(757) 764-8800
USA/BCBL
Mr. Les C. Anderson
USN NRaD Code 411
(619) 553-4139
CAPT Mary Shupack
SPAWAR PD16
(703) 602-0155

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602301EST-191.30.900000
0602301EST-2429.843.345.850.155.000
0603760ECCC-013.715.020.025.0000
0603728F25300.40.30.40.40.400
0603794N


0.70.70.70000
0602232N


1.01.11.41.61.500
0602234N


1.01.21.60000
Total S&T37.962.569.977.156.900
0303140F*


5.66.36.87.77.700
0303140N*


1.51.31.30.90.900
0303140G*


1.21.01.00000
Total46.271.179.085.765.500

*Non-S&T funds.

IS.20.01 Universal Transaction Communications. This DTO will provide warfighters the ability to exchange information, unimpeded by differences in connectivity or interface characteristics; enhance dissemination throughput and connectivity to meet most warfighter needs; provide fully integrated asymmetric services; provide high-capacity, flexible, tactical communications extensions to serve all categories of uses; develop universal transaction protocols and standards providing seamless connectivity across multiple media; and provide automated features to mitigate the effects of man-made and naturally disturbed environments on wireless communications.

By FY97, the program will demonstrate a bandwidth-adaptive multimedia node for mobile computing, advanced mobile networking algorithms, and protocols and transparent relocation within a mobile environment. By FY98, the goal is to demonstrate wireless internet gateways (WINGS) needed to enable seamless marriage of distributed, dynamic, self-organizing, multihop, wireless networks with emerging multimedia internet; a scaleable architecture that can support wireless access across multiple overlay networks while delivering high levels of end-to-end performance; and a prototype low Earth orbit payload to support a direct-broadcast satellite using an adaptive spread Aloha protocol. The FY99 goal is to demonstrate distributing in a multihop environment and an integrated high data rate untethered node. In FY00, the program will demonstrate high-performance mobile wireless networks. FY00/FY01 efforts will focus on exploiting code division multiple access, wideband CDMA, and application specific integrated circuits to insert technology into Army Land Warrior and Marine Corps systems. Efforts in FY02/FY03 will focus on signal conditioning, adaptive conditioning and adaptive addressing technologies to provide seamless connectivity across multiple systems. Technical barriers include protocols and network control for high-population, high-capacity mobile networks; null steering antenna algorithms; multimedia over low data rate channels; and overcoming current limitations in data rates, range, power consumption size, connectivity and multimedia services in the mobile, wireless environment by providing rates greater than 1 Mb/s, ranges greater than 10 km, power consumption greater than 24 hr, and multihop efficiency greater than 30%. This will enable the warfighter to develop concepts and plans without imposing constraints on thought processes by providing seamless connectivity, automatic information conditioning, location-independent personal and group addressing, and flexible adaptive access control.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
R. Ruth
CECOM/DARPA
(703) 696-8945
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSDDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Ms. Joanne Powell
PM JTACS
DCN 992-6021
LTC Ben Fletcher
Dep. Dir. BCBL(G)
DSN 780-2057

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602782AH920.60.71.42.42.700
0603006A247000005.58.0
0603006A2570005.05.06.05.0
0602301EST-1918.018.327.042.5000
0602232N


0.60.70.70.60.600
Total19.219.729.150.58.111.313.4

IS.21.01 Assured Communications. This DTO addresses near-term issues and provides a technology feed for the Joint Warfighter Information Security ACTD. It involves technology development to detect and characterize attacks at the network and lower transport layers. It will also provide high-quality services that will be available as needed; that can be adapted, scaled, and projected to meet dynamically changing demands; and that can be defended against physical, electromagnetic, and information warfare (IW) threats. The program will provide modular plug and play for C4I commensurate with force package modularity to allow adaptation of services; support multilevel security; provide defensive IW to ensure active and passive protection; demonstrate IW surveillance and defense tools to detect, classify, and respond to IW attacks; integrate existing information security devices to provide a suite of operational capabilities for joint and coalition operations; and provide capability for automated communications subsystem selection based on threats, scenario, and intended recipient. The extent, effectiveness, and quality of this protection is measurable in terms of required distance (200 km) from jammers of various power levels (100 W); time (less than 30 seconds) needed to detect, correlate, and characterize IW events; time (10 seconds) to coordinate and respond to IW attacks; time (less than 10 seconds) needed to restore communications connectivity in the face of attack; and measured throughput (1.5 Mb/s) before, during, and after IW attack and response.

By FY97, the program will demonstrate secure guards and firewalls at B3 level of service. Multilevel security requirements will be addressed by the insertion of tactical end-to-end encryption device (TEED) hardware into Task Force XXI. TEEDs to support the tactical internet protocol internetwork should be available for user testing in FY97. Following successful development and testing, TEED will be upgraded to support asynchronous transfer mode cell encryption using Baton technology in FY98. By FY98, cell-agile Fastlane encryption devices will be exploited in joint service testing. The design of waveforms for communications protection will enhance capability to reject three times the number of jamming and unintentional interfering sources to ensure information transmission fidelity by FY01. The program will demonstrate advanced communications waveforms by FY02 which reduce susceptibility to jamming and detection by two orders of magnitude. This will provide the warfighter with a high degree of confidence regarding connectivity throughout all phases of battle, with no attention to different operational levels of security. It will support global logistics information and tracking of warfighter resources in real time. Global connectivity in support of modeling and simulation needs is also supported by this DTO.

Service/Agency POC USD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
D. McAuliffe
USAF Rome Labs
(315) 330-7667
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSDDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Ms. Joanne Powell
PM, JTACS
DCN 992-6021
Mr. Randy Korich
PEO C3S, HTI
DSN 987-3727

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603006A2470000000
0603006A2570.20.20.2 0000
0602702F45190.70.91.11.52.600
0602204F76620.10.100000
0603253F666A02.12.41.01.100
Total1.03.23.72.53.700

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.22.01 Network Management. This DTO will provide the ability to autonomously control information resources; provide the capability to visualize current and projected status of the information system across all domains; develop network management technology to provide a robust theater-level capability in support of joint service needs; provide improved utilization of network resources through efficient, proactive management of all components of the information system; provide peer-to-peer management with existing domain managers; develop network management performance optimization algorithms capable of dynamically adapting to changes in network resources and information flow requirements; provide robust management of network infrastructure to deliver priority-ordered, graceful degradation, and service restoration after outages; develop metrics and algorithms to detect surreptitious behavior within the network and strategies to mitigate their effects; provide a system capable of managing multiple security level information systems; and develop effective planning tools to automate and assist in the design and implementation of very large networks.

By FY97, the program will demonstrate dynamic planning, monitoring, and adaptation of communication networks, incorporating automated network management of tactical internetworks into the Army's Task Force XXI; and simple network management protocol (SNMP) control of asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) ashore and SNMP control of selected radio room equipment in the Navy JMCOMS program. FY98 goals are to demonstrate standards-based network management of global ATM and internet protocol internetworks integrated into a Joint Task Force environment; and peer-to-peer interoperability between different network management systems, including commercial and allied systems. By FY99, the program will provide SNMP control of the Joint Tactical Switch System in JMCOMS and transition integrated management system prototypes developed for the DISN LES environment to a tri-service global network management facility. By FY00, the goal is to demonstrate SNMP control of ATM and provide SNMP(V)2 or common management information protocol (CMIP) reports to CJTF/NAVFOR/MARFOR in JMCOMS. In FY01, integration into various legacy systems will be complete. Technical barriers associated with this area include interoperability protocols and procedures for functioning in a heterogeneous architecture; developing machine-based algorithms for fault detection/isolation and circuit restoral; detection of and immunity to surreptitious behavior; stability under large, dynamically changing network conditions including mobile networks; and integration of multilevel security mechanisms.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
D. Hague
USAF Rome Labs
315-330-7751
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSDDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Sherman Gee
SPAWAR
DSN 226-4844
Ms. Joanne Powell
PM, JTACS
DCN 992-6021
Dr. Howard Frank
DARPA
(703) 696-2228
COL W. Ranne
ACC/DRC
(804) 764-2279

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602702F45192.31.41.00000
0603789F23351.41.01.02.21.100
0603253F38331.40.700000
0602301EST-1930.730.243.944.893.200
0603761ECST-0217.120.315.24.5000
Total52.953.661.151.594.300

IS.23.01 Digital Warfighting Communications. This DTO exploits emerging commercial devices and communications technologies in support of A.02 to provide commanders and warfighters with global, seamless, nonhierarchical adaptive networks for multimedia communications in a dynamic battlefield. The major thrusts of this DTO are to (1) supplement, enhance, and in some cases replace legacy military communications systems unable to keep pace with the rapidly increasing demand for communications bandwidth and global coverage in support of force projection and split-base operations; (2) evolve an integrated communication infrastructure utilizing commercial protocols and standards to achieve global tri-service interoperability through integration of land, air, space, and sea networks into a global asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) infrastructure; and (3) continue joint ATM bandwidth-on-demand experimentation to support multimedia information requirements through a DS-3 (i.e., 44.736 Mb/s) LES connection to other service laboratories.

In FY97, the program will insert ATM switching into Army mobile subscriber equipment, develop a field demonstration version of the Air Force Secure Survivable Communications Network, and continue the Navy shipboard communications program to support joint/allied JMSOMS inter-/intra-ship multimedia requirements; during the same period, it will demonstrate direct broadcast satellite technology in joint service exercises, leading to the Global Broadcast Services (GBS). The program will also begin joint experiments with high-capacity trunk radios to support a variety of mobile subscriber services in FY97. As part of the FY97 Task Force XXII advanced warfighter exercise, GBS hardware will be deployed to support DARPA's Battlefield Awareness and Data Dissemination ACTD (DTO A.14). Tactical applications of the terrestrial personal communications system will be demonstrated in FY97 and FY98 by exploiting both commercial code-division multiple access and broadband technology for Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps applications. The program will demonstrate space crosslink technology via two maneuvering air platforms.

In FY98, the program will test a radio access point to extend ATM services to forward tactical units. By FY00, the goal is to demonstrate next-generation mobile internet protocol services connecting tactical internetworks for littoral and expeditionary warfare between Marine Corps, Navy, and Army combat net radio networks in support of DARPA's Warfighter Internet Program (see DTO A.02). In FY01, RAP and airborne platform interfaces will be demonstrated in the DARPA Warfighter Internet Program.

This initiative overcomes technical issues associated with incorporating emerging commercial standards into a battlefield environment. In addition, several technical barriers must be overcome for the tactical user to take advantage of immediate access to information related to his battlefield awareness. The design of protocols able to adapt to rapidly varying conditions of the battlespace must be addressed. This includes error detection and correction technologies that will allow low error-rate performance over high error-rate links (10-3 bit error rate). This project also addresses the ability of disadvantaged links to support multimedia information services by improving the performance of time-sensitive protocols. Metrics include increased operation range (greater than 200 km), volume of information flow (greater than 45 Mb/s), and operation with highly mobile users.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. Paul Sass
CECOM
(908) 427-2306
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSDDR&E
(703) 614-0207
COL W. Ranne
ACC/DRC
(804) 764-2279
Sherman Gee
SPAWAR
DSN 226-4844
Mr. Randy Korich
PEO C3S, HTI
DSN 987-3727
LTC Ben Fletcher
Dep. Dir. BCBL(G)
DSN 780-2057

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602702F45197.67.24.67.28.000
0602601F33260.60.70.91.41.400
0603238F42162.2000000
0603789F421601.42.42.62.82.82.9
0603253F666A1.60.71.62.20.500
0603401F37840.30.30.30.40.500
0602782AH924.44.76.04.92.000
0603006A2472.30.33.10000
0603006A2579.97.94.60000
0602232N


3.33.62.80.90.700
Total32.226.826.319.515.92.82.9

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.24.01 Multimode, Multiband Information System. This DTO provides the warfighter with flexible, interoperable communications system architecture building blocks by jointly developing the baseline architecture and modular technology needed for an objective multiband, multimode, integrated information transmission system capable of meeting joint service requirements for future digital radio and integrated avionics suites.

In FY97, a six-waveform demonstration will be performed as part of the Task Force XXI Advanced Warfighter Exercise. In FY98, the Army will conduct a command and control vehicle demonstration to illustrate Speakeasy application to difficult cosite platforms. Included are legacy waveforms such as single-channel ground and Airborne Radio System/System Improvement Program, ultrahigh frequency satellite communications, demand-assignment multiple access, Enhanced Position Location Reporting System, very high speed integrated circuit, Have Quick I and II, and improved high-frequency radio, as well as high data-rate packet waveforms required by future digitized battlefield architectures and commercial waveforms such as Global Positioning System and cellular radio. The core radio requirements specify 2-2,000-MHz operation. Integrated avionics efforts focus on thermal management and packaging required for airborne applications. This initiative will ameliorate radio interoperability problems providing the warfighter with the capability to interconnect existing, diverse, and incompatible systems. A significant reduction in the logistics tail, which would be required to support multiple radio systems for multiple applications, is achieved. Technical barriers include the development of high-speed digital signal processors (DSPs), multiband antenna, and an industry/DoD joint radio architecture. By FY99, 17 waveforms in the 2-2,000-MHz band, including network protocols and security, will be demonstrated. Technology insertion includes the use of advanced DSPs; a programmable, cryptographic reduced instruction set, processor-based INFOSEC module; and new interference cancellation circuitry. By FY01, the program will demonstrate the ability to reduce the size, weight, power, and cosite interference problems that occur when multiple radios in the same or dissimilar radio bands are integrated within a single system; and demonstrate reduced radio frequency filtering and band switching to reduce front-end losses and allow extended range or reduced transmit power levels.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. W. Bonser
USAF Rome Laboratory
(315) 330-3829
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSD/C3I
(703) 614-0207
COL W. Ranne
ACC/DRC
(804) 764-2279

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602702F45191.31.42.51.01.900
0602204F76620.7 2.12.22.32.400
0602601F88090.30.40.300 0 0
0603789F23352.23.12.31.52.800
0603253F38331.81.01.03.02.50 0
0603006A2472.62.93.34.03.30 0
0603760ECCC-016.10000 0 0
Total15.010.911.611.812.900

IS.28.02 Intelligent Information Technology. This DTO will develop technology to enable a new level of capability to search, query, monitor, and update large collections of changing, potentially inconsistent, heterogeneous data sources. Data sources include knowledge bases, structured databases, semi-structured documents, and unstructured text and image files. The goal is to reduce by a factor of 10 the time required to construct and validate large knowledge-base (KB) systems. KB systems provide comprehensive coverage of selected domains, are maintainable in a rapidly changing environment, and are reusable by a variety of applications using diverse problem-solving strategies. This DTO will enable a new class of intelligent battlefield systems by producing technology to build large-scale knowledge bases quickly and economically. It will provide the technology to transform dispersed collections of heterogeneous data sources into virtual knowledge bases to support C4I requirements in joint actions involving battlefield situation assessment, telemedicine, and intelligence fusion.

By FY98, the program will demonstrate 100-125% improvement in environments to search, retrieve, cooperatively query, monitor, and update multiple-mediator systems; and develop reusable libraries of primitive KB components and tools to reduce development time from years to months. FY99 goals are to demonstrate a 50% improvement in data/knowledge and to demonstrate large collections of large-scale information associates, including increasing KB magnitude by developing knowledge acquisition tools. These improvements will be demonstrated for C2, logistics, and battlefield awareness, and will assist the warfighter in meeting requirements for information warfare and joint precision strikes. By FY00, the program will demonstrate an increase in the level of integration complexity (greater than 50%), enabling the integration of information sources with different data structures, data schemata, data semantics, and data inconsistencies; demonstrate a ten times productivity improvement by combining the above capabilities with the development of problem-solving methods and techniques. Demonstrations are planned for BADD, ALP, the Joint Force Air Component Command project, the Dynamic Multi-User Information Fusion Program, and the GENOA program for crisis understanding and mitigation. By FY02-03, virtual reality will enable advanced information retrieval and integration tools to achieve substantial increases in the number of data sources which can be integrated.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. James Gantt
ARL
(301) 394-2100
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Robert Welty
Joint Task Force ATD
(619) 552-5276
Dr. Dave Signori
DARPA
(703) 696-2235
Robert Douglass
DARPA
(703) 696-7443

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602783AY-101.01.100000
0602301EST-1131.135.679.397.3122.0138.0142.0
0602301EST-194.9000000
0602702F55811.21.41.61.71.92.02.1
0603728F25320.30.30.30.60.50.50.5
Total38.538.381.399.6124.4140.5144.6

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.29.02 Software Technology for High-Performance Computing. This DTO will develop and demonstrate software tools to develop and transition mission-critical software to new applications of high-performance computers to computer-bound problems in mission rehearsal, ATR, decision aids and modeling and simulation for command and control.

Currently, sequential computers have theoretical limits on computational throughput. High-performance computers (including biological, quantum, and cellular) have no theoretical limit. Current limitations on cost, power, size, and weight are overcome through the use of high-performance computers. High-performance computing power is available at the desktop and, potentially, on the battlefield; however, these machines encompass a wide variety of differing architectures, and software tools and methodologies required to harness the full power of these machines have been sorely lacking. By organizing these technology developments into scaleable software libraries, high-performance languages and runtime services, distributed high-performance computing resources can solve large-scale problems through data and task parallelization. Applications such as satellite image data processing, battle damage assessment, multisensor and information fusion, and automated cooperation among multiple intelligent agents are prime candidates for high-performance computers. These machines also produce more efficient and optimized algorithms for robust, adaptive network communications. By parallelizing and optimizing engineering codes and by capturing and setting up system design knowledge bases and automated resynthesis, system design times can be significantly reduced, leading to end-user field modifiable systems.

In FY99, the program will demonstrate an intelligent, optimizing platform independent compiler with a fivefold to tenfold code improvement over 1995 baselines. In FY00, the goal is to predict response-time performance throughout the design and coding phases for real-time and information processing HPC applications to within 98% of actual performance. During FY02-FY03, the program will demonstrate high-performance computer software engineering environments for reducing parallel software development costs by 75% over 1994 baselines. This capability will facilitate future intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance warfighter missions predicted for the battlefield of the twenty-first century.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. James Gantt
ARL
(301) 394-2100
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Maj Olsen, Joint STARS
(617) 377-5725
Capt Scott Kent, AWACS
Mr. Bob Linza, BMDO/JNTF
Dr. Howard Frank
DARPA
(703) 696-2228

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions) (1)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602301EST-1919.215.914.932.9000
0602301EST-240.7000000
0602702F55815.15.45.65.66.26.56.7
0603728F25271.01.10.61.11.21.21.2
0602783ADY101.01.100000
0602301EST1115.317.014.07.0000
0602301EST2218.119.620.220.821.421.421.4
0602702F55814.2 4.44.84.84.24.24.3
0603728F25321.01.01.20.80.80.90.9
0603728F25270000000
0602234N


9.311.812.412.913.313.714.3
Total74.977.373.786.047.147.848.8

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.30.02 Advanced Embedded Software/System Engineering Technology. The goal of this DTO is to develop, demonstrate, and transition state-of-the-art applications-specific software architecture and computer-based software/system engineering technology to address the $30 billion annual DoD expenditure on embedded software-intensive systems. This will be accomplished by integrating COTS software, software reuse, new tools and environments, and process and technology, thereby significantly improving development and re-engineering productivity and product quality for legacy and embedded systems.

By FY97, the program will demonstrate the potential to reduce system engineering efforts by 40% by incorporating object-oriented technology; and demonstrate multiview design capture schema for multidisciplinary requirements. FY98 goals are to demonstrate the potential to automatically incorporate extra-functional requirements, such as fault-tolerance and security, into mission-critical software; demonstrate the ability to statically evolve system implementation by replacing selected components with components of enhanced capabilities; and support formal investigation of safety, security, and fault tolerance aspects of an architecture. The overall goal is to reduce the manpower and elapsed time to perform these activities over FY95 norms by 50% and 80%, respectively. The program will demonstrate a multicriteria design optimization capability and a C4I software integration infrastructure. By FY99, the plan is to demonstrate the ability to use applications software architectural specifications to reconfigure executing applications in response to changes in the operating environment, reducing required manpower by at least 90%; and to develop human-centered system design processes and methods. By FY00, the program will demonstrate the ability to perform field-adaptable changes to incorporate new warfighting capabilities or interoperability requirements; and demonstrate the ability to use architecture specifications to encapsulate interface and protocol requirements. The FY01 goal is to demonstrate the potential of human-centered design technology to reduce life-cycle costs of complex systems. During FY02-03, the program will demonstrate the potential of knowledge-based technology to reduce total life-cycle costs of software-intensive embedded weapons software by 90% over the FY95 baseline; and demonstrate the ability to perform architectural transformations, reducing software porting costs by 90-95%. This effort relates to DTO IS.28.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. James Gantt
ARL
(301) 394-2100
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
AF B2 Program Office, WPAFB, OH
US Space Command, Peterson AFB, CO,
AF Joint STARS PO, Hanscom AFB, MA
Dr. Howard Frank
DARPA
(703) 696-2228

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602783AY-101.01.100000
0602301EST-1113.517.014.07.0000
0602301EST-2216.519.620.220.821.421.421.4
0602702F55813.53.44.14.13.73.94.0
0603728F25321.01.01.20.80.80.90.9
0603728F25271.4 1.21.71.31.31.41.4
0602234N


4.75.86.06.16.36.46.6
Total41.649.247.140.133.633.934.3

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.31.02 Intelligent Control. The focus of this DTO is on automated learning and reasoning techniques for autonomous systems and intelligent aids for human decision making. The current mode of intelligent control is expensive and tedious because it involves manual software engineering. Labor-intensive parameter adjustments are needed to address complex subsystems and environmental relationships. Additionally, control decisions are too slow for real-time performance. Mechanisms currently available to cope with sensor and actuator failures are too primitive to adapt to unexpected events. Integrating a variety of machine-learning techniques is highly complex. Demonstrations will be conducted using artificial intelligence methods for creating and testing candidate control logic for autonomous and semiautonomous devices. Other methods will be pursued that can utilize emerging simulations of devices and their environments and are extendible to acquisition of control logic in support of single devices, as well as multiple-device systems where coordinated behavior is required. Demonstrations of control logic acquisition and testing will be conducted with simulated applications of undersea, ground, and air vehicles engaged in tactical combat and strategic maneuvering. Real-time control is supported by data from innovative vision subsystems.

In FY97, the program will demonstrate the application of machine-learning techniques to robotics software development and control on area mapping tasks; demonstrate learning of tactics for coordinated behavior by multiple mobile robots on a simplified surveillance task; and implement and test learning methods in environments in which other agents are also learning. In FY98-02, the plan is to demonstrate learning of tactics for coordinated behavior by multiple robots on complex surveillance tasks, and distribute to service laboratories advanced tools integrating machine learning methods. This DTO contributes to the JWSTP Information Superiority area by providing tools to create software for controlling mobile surveillance and reconnaissance platforms, and to Precision Force by providing tools for the adaptive testing of guidance and control software in weapon delivery systems. Success in meeting these objectives will be measured via a sequence of experiments with mobile robots which incorporate machine learning algorithms. The metrics to measure success include scalability, or support for multiple levels of behaviors/tasks, adapting to environmental changes, and adapting to internal changes; efficiency in learning and performance; stability (convergence or oscillations to a set of behaviors); communication (amount/frequency required to perform cooperative tasks); and robustness.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. James Gantt
ARL
(301) 394-2100
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
LTC John Wellman
HQ USACOM J33
(804) 322-7613
Walt Harris
HQ USACOM J33
(804) 327-5024

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602234N


1.62.12.32.62.83.03.3
Total1.62.12.32.62.83.03.3

IS.32.02 Information Presentation and Interaction. The goal is to develop and demonstrate advanced concepts to allow warfighter interaction with a global information system in a naturally expressive, timely, and flexible manner. Activities include infrastructure support for collaborative decision making and battle damage assessment; interactive faster-than-real-time war gaming; warfare assessment; battlefield data fusion; synthetic visualization for mission scheduling, planning and rehearsal, simulation, and training; enhanced battlefield situational awareness using presentation technology for stereoscopic three-dimensional viewing; and more natural modes of system interaction such as speech and gestures.

By FY97, the program will demonstrate a very high resolution (6 million pixels) group data wall with spoken input and an electronic grease pencil interface; and demonstrate the spectrum of virtual worlds applications (immersive, nonimmersive, and augmented) for mission planning and rehearsal. The FY98 goal is to demonstrate a 15-million pixel data wall supporting the simultaneous interaction of multiple collocated users. By FY00, the program will incorporate gesture interpretation with spoken input as synergistic C4I interface. This initiative attempts to overcome the inherent limitations of current command and control systems and offer the warfighter major improvements in the ability to see, understand, and interact, in real time, with critical worldwide information. It is anticipated that situational awareness will improve by 50% and dynamic war planning/replanning activity will occur in 50% of current time lines. This DTO supports DTOs IS.01, IS.02, and IS.03.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POCCustomer POCCustomer POC
Dr. James Gantt
ARL
(301) 394-2100
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Mr. Erik Chaum
NUWC
(401) 841-4581
Mr. Raul Salas
AF Info. Warfare Ctr
(210) 977-3142
Dr. Dave Signori
DARPA
(703) 696-2235
dsignori@darpa.mil
Capt Jeff Haymond
AF SPACECOM
DSN 692-9126

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602301EST-1111.417.02.01.0000
0602301EST-1921.827.448.343.820.000
0602702F55811.4 1.41.62.22.52.62.7
0603728F25300.2 0.10.20.70.80.80.8
0603728F25320.30.100000
0602234N


0.60.60.60.60.60.60.6
0603761ECST-020.3000000
Total36.146.652.648.323.84.04.1

Note: Totals may not add due to rounding.

IS.33.02 Embedded High-Performance Computing. The goal is to provide timely, affordable, and easily upgradable technology to meet the high-speed computational demands of the military by leveraging and influencing the efforts of the commercial sector. This DTO will provide the technology for improving ATR from air, space, ground, and sea vehicles and weapons, and improving other high-computation tasks such as sensor/data/knowledge fusion for situational awareness. The objective is to develop innovative computational models, methods, and mechanisms which explore the limits of nontraditional computing; to define models of computation for nontraditional approaches and potential elemental computational mechanisms; and to validate these mechanisms through experimentation. The intent is to model, prototype, and characterize nontraditional computing approaches to explore the limits of deep submission silicon-based technology and predict the behavior and limits of new computational modalities.

By FY97, the program will demonstrate a capability for 100 GFLOPS/ft3 for militarized high-performance computing. By FY98, the program will demonstrate 10% less memory usage, 10% performance improvement, and a five times improvement in rest time. The goal is to accomplish adaptive load balancing by FY99, and, by FY00, demonstrate a TFLOPS scaleable system with a hard-real-time secure operating system and middleware. Also by FY00, the program will demonstrate a high-performance architecture independent software/system engineering suite for achieving 50% overall efficiency on massively parallel computers.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Dr. James Gantt
ARL
404-894-1815
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
703-614-0207
Maj Olsen, Joint STARS
Capt Scott Kent,
Mr. Bob Linza, BMDO/JNTF
USA/STAR-96
USAF/Tier 3 ASTAMIDS
TESAR
USAF/TENCAP
Dr. Howard Frank
DARPA
(703) 696-2228

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602301EST-1972.671.666.749.065.900
0602301EST-244.12.50.30000
0602712EMPT-028.4000000
0603761ECST-020.5000000
Total85.674.167.049.065.900

IS.34.01 Joint Force Air Component Command Battle Management Program. This DTO will develop, integrate, and demonstrate system architecture and planning technologies enabling revolutionary air campaign planning processes, which will significantly enhance a Joint Force Air Component Command (JFACC) ability to plan and execute an air campaign at any level of crisis. The JFACC program will transform air operations planning capabilities from a reactive, sequential system to one providing continuous, near-real-time predictive planning, and rapid response to dynamic situations. A robust planning capability enabling rapid evaluation of alternatives, less human-intensive planning processes, and feedback on campaign accomplishment will be realized. A JFACC planning and execution system will be developed that can be tailored to theater needs with significant reach-back. The JFACC program will provide a system architecture to support a range of operational concepts, including coordinated decentralized execution of operations. This DTO will use planning technology and infrastructure developed under other DTOs (IS.02 and A.37), and will provide technology input into the Advanced Joint Planning ACTD (F.02).

By FY97, the program will demonstrate a tailorable information architecture to support an integrated, collaborative planning tool set; demonstrate a prototype intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and logistics planner; demonstrate a prototype target system analysis capability, collaborative support for integrated planning, and use of a comprehensive priority/value-derived decision support structure based on the strategy-to-task paradigm; and utilize map-based static and dynamic visualization for plan development and assessment. By FY98, the program will demonstrate integrated strategy development using objective-to-task-to-activity planning agents, integrated campaign assessment relating objectives to tasks and measures of merit (MOMs), and support for spontaneous virtual planning groups including data sharing, replication, and consistency management. The FY99 goal is to demonstrate continuous integrated planning including agents, situation triggers, and adversary models; dynamic continuous campaign assessment with automatic update of status of plan satisfaction; and seamless, reconfigurable collaborative planning to support multiple tasks. By FY00-01, the program will demonstrate the ability to rapidly generate and evaluate course of action and develop an integrated strategy which establishes tasks and MOMs for force application, force enhancement, force support, and aerospace control.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Col Robert Plebanek
DARPA/ISO
(703) 696-2375
Ms. Virginia Castor
ODDR&E
(703) 695-0207
Col Maris McCrabb
ACC/DRV
(757) 764-8800

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603760ECCC-0113.132.737.124.420.000
0602702F55810.20.40.40.90.400
0603782F253000.61.01.31.500
Total13.333.738.526.621.900

IS.38.01 Antenna Technologies. The goal of this DTO is to develop and demonstrate affordable antennas to support on-the-move operations to a variety of platforms. These antennas will improve performance (e.g., link availability, bandwidth), service multiple functions, and reduce weight, volume, and signature profiles (e.g., infrared, RCS, visual). The primary technologies that will be developed to achieve this objective include structurally integrated wideband antennas (bandwidth versus impedance match versus radiation pattern), multifunction signal distribution architectures (dynamic range versus bandwidth versus power handling), and electronics for cosite electromagnetic (EM) interference mitigation (isolation versus settling time versus bandwidth). Principal demonstrations include (1) high data rate, ultra high frequency transmit/receive architecture as part of the Multifunction Electromagnetic Radiating System (MERS) ATD in FY97 (this architecture will enable multiple radios to utilize a single antenna with a factor of 100 improvement in bandwidth); (2) broadband high-power cosite interference cancellation as part of the MERS ATD and the Army Speakeasy command and control vehicle demonstration in FY98 (this will enable a reduction of cosite EM interference from 10 to 60 dB in less than 100 microseconds); (3) photonically reconfigurable multifunction CNI antenna as part of the Navy/Army SERAT demonstration in FY98 (this conformal antenna technology will enable a single antenna structure to service three unique CNI functions reducing the number of antennas by a factor of 3); (4) wideband antenna technology for Speakeasy applications (this will reduce the number of required antennas); (5) structure-tuned, optically switched reconfigurable antenna technology (in FY98); (6) affordable one-dimensional, multifunction SATCOM phased array as part of the Navy Submarine Communications ATD in FY98 (this will enable multiple SATCOM signal beams to be transmitted/received simultaneously via one-dimensional phased array steering that will significantly reduce the array cost); (7) shipboard test of the MERS ATD, validating performance of affordable, structurally integrated, multifunction antenna system servicing at least four disparate communications systems in FY99 (this technology will enable a reduction by a factor of 3 in the number of antennas located topside on the next-generation surface combatant; (8) OTM, self-steering antenna capability for SHF and EHF land-based SATCOM terminals in FY00 and FY01, respectively (this technology will enhance link availability for land-based SATCOM); (9) OTM wideband (45 Mb/s at X-band), triple beam, phased array antenna technology with full duplex operation demonstration as part of the DBC ATD (part of IS.23) in FY99 (this technology will allow high-capacity, OTM RAP operation with multiple simultaneous transmissions in mobile environments); and (9) an integrated photonic subsystem in FY00 (this will demonstrate photonic control of a multipanel, phased array antenna to significantly reduce the size, weight, cost, and power requirements while at the same time increase performance).

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Steve Hart
NRaD, San Diego
Ms. Virginia Castor
OSD, DDR&E
(703) 614-0207
Mr. Randy Korich
PEO C3S, HTI
DSN 987-3727
COL W. Ranne
ACC/DRC
(804) 764-2279
Dr. Sherman Gee
SPAWAR
DSN 226-4844

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602702F45190.40.61.71.201.11.1
0602702F46000.4 0.200000
0602782AH921.52.02.12.12.300
0603430F40562.30.300000
0603006A2471.62.72.31.5000
0603006A2570.40.20.20.1000
0602232N


4.13.91.60000
0603792NR18894.06.44.50000
Total14.716.312.44.92.31.11.1

IS.40.01 Individual Combatant and Small-Unit Operations Simulation. This DTO will develop a high-level, architecture-compliant individual combatant simulation system across the Research, Development and Acquisition (RDA), Advanced Concepts and Requirements (ACR) and Training Exercises and Military Operations (TEMO) domains. Technical barriers include human representation and visualization of individuals and weapon states, human performance modeling, human system interfaces that are unencumbered and elicit realistic performance, networked simulations for interoperability with other dissimilar simulations, computer-generated forces that contain realistic individual and unit-level behaviors with C3I representation, synthetic terrain with relevant resolution/fidelity to allow operations in a tactically correct manner, and instrumentation for high-precision engagement simulation to allow for data capture and analysis.

By FY98, the program will refine RDA, ACR, and TEMO simulation requirements, and create a multisensory, real-time networked simulation of the battlefield that immerses the individual combatant in three-dimensional geographical space using virtual reality technologies.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Ms. Traci Jones
STRICOM
(407) 384-3927
Ms. Virginia Castor
DDR&E/IT
(703) 614-0207
COL Bosse
USAIC DBBL
(706) 545-2310
LTC Walter Hamm
MARCORSYSCOM
(703) 784-4790
LTC Walter Hamm
MARCORSYSCOM
(703) 784-4790
COL Pentecost
USAIS-DOT
(706) 545-5717

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0602308AC901.8 1.400000
0602716AH700.80.800000
0602618AH800.70.700000
Total3.32.900000

IS.46.01 Advanced Logistics Program. This DTO develops technology which will be demonstrated through DTO F.14, Joint Decision Support Tools (Joint Logistics ACTD, Phase II), and F.15, Real-Time Focused Logistics (Joint Logistics ACTD, Phase III). The Advanced Logistics Program (ALP) will produce information technology to put the right materiel in the right place at the right time, while supporting the need to do so with reduced reliance on large DoD inventories. ALP will develop a shared technology base of information manipulation and planning tools to support planning, execution, monitoring, and focused replanning throughout the logistics pipeline. This will be demonstrated through a system that couples continuous planning and execution monitoring in an interoperable course of action (COA) and logistics support environment linking CINC operations and logistics staff, DLA, and TRANSCOM. The program will focus on four main areas: transportation tools to track assets and make smarter use of lift; rapid supply services for faster and more flexible acquisition of supplies; force sustainment planning and sourcing; and logistics COA feasibility planning linked to the war plan.

During FY96-97 (Phase I), ALP will develop and demonstrate data gathering tools to include semiautonomous capture, search, and retrieval of data in disparate defense and commercial logistics sources. Servers for transportation, sustainment, and rapid supply services will be developed, upon which integrated applications to support planning, direct scheduling, and execution will be run. This architecture will provide collaborative visualization and a decision support environment for force deployment. This DTO also will develop automated supply and sustainment source locating and purchasing tools and demonstrate coarse-grained COA. During FY98-99 (Phase II), the ALP will demonstrate an integrated environment to support the planning, execution, and monitoring of a major force deployment, including optimized scheduling and routing with zero staging throughout the move. The collaborative decision environment will be expanded for in-theater units, DLA, and service logistics commands. An automated dynamic critical items list will be developed as an integral part of sustainment planning and execution. ALP will develop and demonstrate the ability to rapidly negotiate between suppliers and buyers, through information exchange, including rapid flexible team and item relationship catalogs. Significant research will develop deviation detection sentinels and predictive analysis tools and demonstrate a medium-grained COA evaluation. During FY00 (Phase III), ALP will develop and demonstrate a complete end-to-end advanced logistics system for the planning, execution, monitoring, and rapid replanning of a major force deployment from CONUS to in-theater final destination, including dependency-driver notification for reactive replanning, a logistics annex for the OPLAN, and a fine-grained COA evaluation.

Service/Agency POCUSD(A&T) POC Customer POC
Mr. Brian Sharkey
DARPA
(703) 696-2353
DSN 426-2353
Dr. Graham Law
DDR&E
(703) 693-0462
Multiple Agencies

Programmed DTO Funding ($ millions)
PEProjectFY97FY98FY99FY00FY01FY02FY03
0603712SDLA12.912.912.912.912.812.60
0602702ETT-1018.325.727.710.610.000
Total31.238.640.623.522.812.60