DARPA Advances AI Program For Air Traffic Control 142
coondoggie writes to tell us that DARPA has taken the next step in a program that aims to utilize artificial intelligence for the purposes of air traffic control. "GILA will also help Air Force planners use and retain the skills of expert operators, especially as they rotate out of the Air Force. DARPA says the artificial intelligence software will learn by assembling knowledge from different sources — including generating knowledge by reasoning. According to a Military & Aerospace item, such software has to combine limited observations with subject expertise, general knowledge, reasoning, and by asking what-if questions."
True Skynet (Score:3, Funny)
You missed some steps. (Score:2, Funny)
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Re:True Skynet (Score:5, Insightful)
This sounds like they're setting themselves up for one of the less predictable problems with the expert systems of the '80s: namely the fact that experts sometimes don't want to transfer their hard-acquired knowledge into a box designed to replace them. But given that this is the Air Force, "orders" might be the solution.
Re:True Skynet (Score:5, Insightful)
The experts in question are leaving the air force and taking knowledge with them. The AI is not replacing a person being layed off.
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"Make me a sandwich."
"What? Make it yourself."
"sudo Make me a sandwich."
"Okay."
http://xkcd.com/149/ [xkcd.com]
Re:True Skynet.... Well, I'm thinking "The Medusa (Score:2)
A word of advice: (Score:2, Funny)
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HAL: Affirmative, Dave, I read you.
Dave Bowman: Open the pod bay doors, HAL.
HAL: I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.
Dave Bowman: What's the problem?
HAL: I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do.
Dave Bowman: What are you talking about, HAL?
HAL: This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it.
Dave Bowman: I don't know what you're talking about, HAL?
HAL: I know you and Frank were planning to disconnect me,
Oblig. (Score:1)
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HAL: Dave, although you took thorough precautions in the pod against my hearing you, I could see your lips move.
Which bothers me every time I watch that movie... I mean, especially the way the shot is framed you can see Hal's "eye" right through the pod window... and especially with the way Hal has been acting up to this point, that unmoving eye is creepy. If I was secretly plotting to disconnect the computer that I didn't trust, I'd have made sure it
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You're absolutely right. That's even more weird.
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Seriously off-topic
HAL really is scary, but I'm sure a modern version of this movie would be even freakier. Lip-reading might still be a problem for modern computers, but a modern version would feature cams and microphones everywhere. The computer might even use general-purpose circuits as a microphone. Maybe a remake would be quite interesting.
However, the lip-reading sequence is a manifestation of classic movie fear (just like the don't go into the basement scenes in horror movies). We've seen it so
Greetings, Professor Falken (Score:1, Funny)
Re:A word of advice:I'm sorry Dave I can't do that (Score:1)
I'm sorry Dave...................
Bayesian filtering? (Score:2)
If so, I predict very bad handling for aircraft coming from Nigeria.
Re:Bayesian filtering? (Score:5, Funny)
I am prince plane from kingdom of Nigeria. I am most pleasing to make your known acquaintance. An hours few ago then, I was escaped my country from fear of my passengers lives. In my account I am hold $436,875,000 US DOLLARS and I am needing somebody to help I return this money. I am finding your air traffic control on the internet and am most impressed with your record. If you are landing me to help, I am giving you a TEN PERCENT SHARE of the $418,327,000 US DOLLARS!! PLEASE provide your air traffic control codes, you do not have to have ANY air craft in your airport, I am needing an INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT to prove to my bank who I am (PPRINCE PLANE FROM NIGERIA) and returns the money safely.
Thanking you in advance,
PRINCE PLANE
Once there ingratiate flip donkey ruby on rails framework with the pyhont 3000 interpreter. Please girls are beauty is in the eye of the beholder. We pizza going. Friday the 14th is a day to remember for which an elephant at the zoo. Running away freely I quickly acquiesce. Soviet gun control is heading to soccer mom toyota. Bullet train to tokyo as ever more always.
No way (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:No way (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't drink, they don't smoke pot, they don't get tired, inattentive, they don't have wife/husband/kid problems, no financial problems and also no mental ones.
Some of us got a new hip installed by a robot, so why not trust a computer to tell our plane the right things, especially since their colleagues are already flying the planes most of the time.
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Wikipedia link for the accident [wikipedia.org]. There is some controversy surrounding the cause of the crash, but the plane was certainly not being flown by a computer at the time of the crash as the voice-over would have you believe.
[Short story: It was a combination of the airplane giving the pilot incorrect information about altitude, the pilot not paying attention to other cues letting him know something was wrong, and the plane not responding correctly w
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I don't trust people to do this job, so why the hell would I trust a computer?
They don't drink, they don't smoke pot, they don't get tired, inattentive, they don't have wife/husband/kid problems, no financial problems and also no mental ones.
Some of us got a new hip installed by a robot, so why not trust a computer to tell our plane the right things, especially since their colleagues are already flying the planes most of the time.
The AI should always have a human spotter. :)
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But their programmers and administrators do, except for the spouse/kid thing - unless, of course, you're Hans Reiser (**ducks**) :-)
Re:No way (Score:5, Funny)
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Computers are great for recording and processing data but are absolutely horrible at interperating it or making decisions based on it. The ones operating aircraft are doing very specific, simple actions, based on controlled and limited information. They are only "flying" the aircraft in the
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Like DARPA is going to use some of the shelf game as the core of its architecture. NASA probably used the same in the rovers right? Maybe DARPA are a little ahead of the curve on this.
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Typically the aircraft I'm familiar with have an INS system with 2x redundancy, a GPS (is used for back-up navigation and to operate moving map systems, ot
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System error...please contact your system administrator.
Abort, retry, ignore? American765: WTF???
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"American765: WTF???" was supposed to be on a new line...
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Because a computer won't miss work, show up drunk or stoned, or just be inattentive while at this high stress job. Of course, it assumes that we can automate the task without buggy software. You always "trust" people. You trust those that built the roads that you drive on, you trust those that build your cars, you trust that food sold at stores is "safe", and you trust those that designed, built, and fly planes do their job well.
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Computers handle nuclear power plants, life support systems, and trillions of dollars with financial transactions every day without human interaction.
Are you able to sleep at night?
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Most of your commercial flight activity is controlled by computers already. You think the pilots moving the sticks REALLY equates to aircraft control? The pilots tell the computers where to fly the plane, the computers handles all the control surfaces.
Once upon a time, telecommunications were handled by humans creating dedicated circuits. Now, computers switch and route packets around the world with orders-of-magnitude better efficiency. Computers are just better suited t
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And the alternative? Got some clever gorillas you'd rather do it? Space aliens? Hyper-intelligent pan-dimensional beings?
Computers do what they are told - always - until their hardware deteriorates and malfunctions. Humans do what they are told if you coerce them hard enough, aren't lazy and happen to feel like doing it at the moment. Computers are exact and detailed and repeat tasks exactly the same way again and again. Peop
What if? (Score:2, Funny)
Does it reroute all of our airplanes to Redmond for analysis?
Sorry, had to.
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I too, had to.
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In the case of Windows 2003, your planes would be rerouted into a forest.
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You get a Blue Sky of Death.
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I don't know about this ... (Score:3, Funny)
I see we're still on track for Judgment Day, even if it's taken a bit longer than Cameron originally estimated.
----
Terminator: The Skynet Funding Bill is passed. The system goes on-line August 4th, 1997. Human decisions are removed from strategic defense. Skynet begins to learn at a geometric rate. It becomes self-aware at 2:14 a.m. Eastern time, August 29th. In a panic, they try to pull the plug.
Sarah: Skynet fights back.
Terminator: Yes. It launches its missiles against the targets in Russia.
John: Why attack Russia? Aren't they our friends now?
Terminator: Because Skynet knows the Russian counter-attack will eliminate its enemies over here.
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Don't blame Cameron; she was distracted by her thing for House.
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Oblig (Score:1)
I can see it now! (Score:1)
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>
How about.. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Great idea, until in a HAL-esque moment the AI decides that the only way to have safe flights is to have no passengers, which leads to the obvious solution of KILL ALL HUMANS!
And no, I'm not actually afraid of AI
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Airspace deconfliction (Score:5, Informative)
This is about what Air Force types call "Airspace Deconfliction". In any major war today, you've got all sorts of players using the airspace. There are bombers, some of which don't show on radar. There are tankers for the bombers. There are fighters zooming around, UAVs, helicopters, and missiles. Plus there's ground antiaircraft fire and artillery. And that's just our side; the enemy has their stuff, and it has to be found, identified, and avoided or targeted.
All this has to be coordinated, at least loosely. Coordination today is mostly at the level of "this area/altitude is reserved for this group", with preplanning of who fits where. That works until the enemy crosses the lines, which, if they're not totally incompetent, they will. Then plans have to be changed in a hurry.
Systems to deal with a mess like that could be a big help if they can be made to work.
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Is this called "reconfliction"?
Acronym abuse (Score:2)
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I love it when I have to click the link to know what the hell the summary is talking about.
AI = Artificial Intelligence [wikipedia.org] (Most people know this one)
DARPA = Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency [wikipedia.org] (Most nerds know who this is, if not the actual acronym)
GILA = Generalized Integrated Learning Architecture [sri.com] (OK - I had to look this up, but it didn't prevent me from understanding the summary...)
Does that help?
Try something safer first - fix baggage handling (Score:5, Interesting)
Before trying something as ambitious as routing airplanes, why not see if they can route luggage?
Re:Try something safer first - fix baggage handlin (Score:2)
I remember a couple months ago at ATL watching a piece of luggage fall out of one of those trucks that carry luggage from terminal to terminal. It sat there about 30 feet away from the plane on the tarmac, with other handlers riding their trucks right pa
Re:Try something safer first - fix baggage handlin (Score:2)
From TFLA: "The airport's [Denver International] computerized baggage system, which was supposed to reduce flight delays, shorten waiting times at luggage carousels, and save airlines in labor costs, turned into an unmitigated failure, and is widely given as a textbook example of a software engineering disaster"
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When I read about it In Scientific American, the cost had ballooned to a half-billion (and the wiki article, which quotes an original budget of under $200 million, is wrong - it was originally supposed to be $100 million. They had agreed to pay $500 / line for the software (which was 5x the going rate for finished, debugged software) figuring that there was NO way it would go over-budget.
Im in favor of this (Score:5, Interesting)
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No networks. (Score:2)
Centralized systems don't scale (Score:2, Interesting)
Current ATC is a centralized system, and has scaled poorly. Proof is the very many 'near misses' due to ATC mistakes every year.
The combination of Global Positioning, "broadcast your vector" and some rules could allow every aircraft to handle its own flight plan, including landing and landing order.
I had that idea 25 years ago, heard that the FAA was investigating it maybe 10 years ago. Nothing since.
Another technology that will put too many experts out of work, so it won't happen.
Lew
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The best solution might be to utilize both techniques. Centralized planning at airports and decentralized planning (ie, p2p) for incase something goes wrong. Decentralized
I think what scares me... (Score:2)
remember we were told tasers were safe
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Politicians are fake intelligence ... which just goes to show that we need a real definition of artificial intelligence, as opposed to artificial sub-morons.
automated intelligence (Score:1)
So in the unemployment line we will see.... (Score:2)
Beep (Score:1)
Maybe they'll just use the ATC from FS2004 (Score:3, Interesting)
"PP242, please expedite your descent to 8000"
"PP242, please expedite your descent to 8000"
"PP242, please expedite your descent to 8000"
"PP242, please expedite your turn to 120"
"PP242, please expedite your turn to 120"
"PP242, please expedite your turn to 120"
I wonder if Microsoft plans to upgrade its ATC to not require 90 degree turns to make a one mile course correction. Or how about that wonderful scenario when you overshoot your waypoint and have to turn around and go back to it before the ATC will let you continue. Same for step climbing to cruise altitude. I don't fly real planes, so maybe real life ATC is just as anal, but man, it's a game; make it fun!
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In general no, they're not. Mind, if you keep messing up, expect the FCC to invite you in for a little chat about that. (Indeed, as pilot-in-command you can refuse ATC instructions and ask for different ones, but you'd better have a flight-safety reason to back that up.)
It's been a whle since I flew as pilot, but on commercial flights that have it I like to listen to the radio chatter on the headphones, it's usually more interesting than any of the music channels or the
Skynet vs. HAL (Score:2)
Can't trust computers, rather trust people?!?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyone remember G.E.E.C. ? (Score:1)
AI potentially do things humans can't (Score:2)
Algorithm for packing sardines into smaller cans (Score:2)
Re:Algorithm for packing sardines into smaller can (Score:2)
WOPPR says (Score:2)
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Mr. Clippy (Score:4, Funny)
Typical Pentagon Centralization (Score:2)
Most actual piloting is already handled by AI, autopilots. The crew spends most of its time fighting boredom (and whatever _Airplane! [imdb.com]_ got right). Instead, they should participate in a distributed global air traffic control system. Let every plane report its GPS position to a satel
Advances? (Score:2, Insightful)
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/11/22/1634242 [slashdot.org]
Its going to take 20 years and 20 billion dollars.
Next generation intelligence? Jesus, if they had a DOS prompt, it would be a step up. The current computers were built in the 50s, and have increasing downtimes. ATCs float the boat ( the old manual system, that dates to pre-WWII ) at least once a week, and twice in one day in december. ( Busiest time )
They have to phase in the new system, because they still do not know how reliably it all scales. On
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If you don't interpret it as humor, you'll realize that it isn't bad humor, or any humor at all.
I suffer with you, indeed all sane slashdotters suffer, when a repetitive minority endlessly repeats its already-ten-thousand-times-repeated "jokes". But this tag is not one of them.