Vanderbilt engineers part of $2.8 million grant
to link war fighters to global information grid
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2005
A computer freeze-up in the office is a hassle. In a fighter jet
peppered with enemy fire, it’s a crisis.
Getting the increasingly large and complex systems people have
come to rely on to interface and interact without shutting down
has been the focus of engineering professor
Doug Schmidt’s career. As part of a recent Air Force grant,
an engineering school team led by Schmidt will help develop a
system to link war fighters seamlessly to the Global Information
Grid.
Schmidt and his team at Vanderbilt are part of a $2.8 million
grant to develop a system that will allow soldiers to access
information they need no matter where they are or in what
circumstances, and regardless of their connection device and
available bandwidth.
The funding comes from the
Air Force Research
Laboratory. BBN Technologies,
an advanced technology firm that was one of the original
pioneers of the Internet, is the lead contractor for a team
that, in addition to Vanderbilt, includes
Boeing and the
Institute for Human Machine
Cognition.
By awarding the grant, the Air Force is asking the team to
create technological improvements that, for example, would allow
a convoy traveling through a hostile city to immediately access
information – from historical data to up-to-the-minute traffic
information on the planned route. Even a stalled truck along the
road could create a life-threatening situation for the soldiers,
so the need to access that kind of data and make rapid changes
using all available technology is critical.
The prototype system under development for the Air Force, called
Quality of Service Enabled Dissemination (QED), would not only
help improve the quality of the complex systems but increase
tolerance for disruptions to ensure that troops in tactical
situations get the information they need on time and intact,
according to Schmidt.
Schmidt has spent his career developing ways to test the
increasingly complex systems, many of which were developed
separately, that have become integral to so many facets of
modern life. He has focused on testing these large systems in a
sort of simulated technological wind tunnel in order to get all
the complex parts to talk to each other. The Air Force grant
funds one of four such projects Schmidt is leading at
Vanderbilt.
“One of the great things about complexity is that we can now
build things that are so big, we can’t test them using
conventional techniques and tools. But the more we become
reliant on these systems, the more we need to become more
certain they’re going to work,” Schmidt said. “Our role is to
make sure they work as advertised.”
The software tools and platforms developed at Vanderbilt are
designed to empower pilots, fighters and their commanders to
communicate with each other seamlessly, he said. The software
harnesses the powers of the Global Information Grid, which
includes all communications networks, from the Internet to cell
phones to satellite communication to land lines.
[Click here to read the BBN
announcement about the grant and click
here to read a recent faculty spotlight on Doug Schmidt.]
Media Contact: Jennifer Johnston (615) 322-NEWS
Jennifer.johnston@vanderbilt.edu