Author Topic: Artificial intelligence: Removing the human from mission command  (Read 180 times)

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Artificial intelligence: Removing the human from mission command
Capt. Alex Hillman
 

Disruptive technologies drive doctrinal and operational changes for modern militaries. Particularly in the last 120 years, industrial and technological advancements have revolutionized warfare. In the last century, the United States military has developed a military machine that is centered on a guiding command-and-control principle: centralized control, decentralized execution. However, the next decade will bring significant advancements in autonomous decision-making and artificial intelligence, chauffeuring in resilient, distributed command and control and dislodging the human operator from mission command.

While artificial intelligence and autonomous systems are already broadly employed in health, transportation and digital services, true autonomy in military systems is still in development. A foundational challenge in AI applications within systems that are capable of taking human life is trust. Military autonomous applications can and should be subjected to extensive verification and validation, to include comparing machine-enabled decision-making tendencies to those of the human operator.

https://www.c4isrnet.com/opinion/2020/08/13/artificial-intelligence-removing-the-human-from-mission-command/