Automated Intelligent Pilots for Combat Flight Simulation

Authors

  • Randolph M. Jones
  • John E. Laird
  • Paul E. Nielsen
  • Karen J. Coulter
  • Patrick Kenny
  • Frank V. Koss

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aimag.v20i1.1438

Abstract

TACAIR-SOAR is an intelligent, rule-based system that generates believable humanlike behavior for large-scale, distributed military simulations. The innovation of the application is primarily a matter of scale and integration. The system is capable of executing most of the airborne missions that the U.S. military flies in fixed-wing aircraft. It accomplishes its missions by integrating a wide variety of intelligent capabilities, including real-time hierarchical execution of complex goals and plans, communication and coordination with humans and simulated entities, maintenance of situational awareness, and the ability to accept and respond to new orders while in flight. The system is currentl y deployed at the Oceana Naval Air Station WISSARD (what-if simulation system for advanced research and development) Lab and the Air Force Research Laboratory in Mesa, Arizona. Its most dramatic use was in the Synthetic Theater of War 1997, which was an operational training exercise that ran for 48 continuous hours during which TACAIR-SOAR flew all U.S. fixed-wing aircraft.

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Published

1999-03-15

How to Cite

Jones, R. M., Laird, J. E., Nielsen, P. E., Coulter, K. J., Kenny, P., & Koss, F. V. (1999). Automated Intelligent Pilots for Combat Flight Simulation. AI Magazine, 20(1), 27. https://doi.org/10.1609/aimag.v20i1.1438

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Section

Articles