Title: HSI Technologies
1Science TechnologyforHuman Systems
Integration (HSI)
Dr. Robert E. Foster Director, Bio
Systems Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of
Defensefor Science Technology February 4,
2003MANPRINT Practitioners Workshop
2Setting the Stage
- Subordinate to the human dimension of warfare is
the command and control piece, those things that
facilitate decisions. What they give us is
situational awareness. Situational awareness
increases the information we have to make
decisions. It does not mean were gonna make the
right decision just because we have the
information. emphasis added - BG Honore, USA
- in 66 Stories of Battle Command
- by Frame and Lussier, 2000
3What Im thinking about
- Transformational knowledge systems
- Optimizing first spiral utility disciplined HSI
- Warrior Readiness
- HSI centered
- Human Systems Reliance as a resource
- Small businesses a resource (SBIR)
- Interdisciplinary teamwork KEY enabler
The foundation of HSI is SCIENCE
4Are we transforming capability or just building
infrastructure?
What are the metrics?
5Knowledge SystemsIntegrated Training,
Decision-Support and Automation
- Create a Continuous Learning Environment
- Self-Sharpening Sword
- All work experiences/episodes of performance
become learning opportunities - Automated feedback remediation
- Dynamic Distribution of Function Between Human
and System based on - Individual strengths / weaknesses
- Criticality of mission
- Workload other performance indicators
- Dynamic Function Allocation
- Team level
6Warrior ReadinessJoint Warfighting Capability
Objective
- Warrior Readiness is the capability to have all
warfighters and support personnel cognitively and
physically ready to conduct assigned missions and
operations. - It spans the human dimension of warfare to
include force health protection, personnel
performance and training, personnel protection,
cognitive and behavioral adaptability, mission
planning and rehearsal, status reporting and
predictive assessment, and human systems
integration into warfighting.
The human is the prime resource and key
enablerin all warfighting systems.
7Human Systems RelianceEnhancing Human
Capabilities
Distinct Subareas
SHARING
- Strong scientific foundation in the areas of
cognition, learning, human performance, human
protection - Develop human performance metrics
- Define human-system integration methods
- Develop human system design tools for all topical
research and development - Document, document, document (research produces
knowledge!)
Common Principles
8Human SystemsSub-Area Descriptions
- Supports warfighting needs in data presentation
and situational understanding via aural, visual,
tactile, and immersive interfaces for individuals
and teams. - Uses intelligent aiding, decision support, and
decision-centered process control to speed,
expand, measure, and optimize the cognitive
processing capabilities of the human operator in
all aspects of warfighter operations.
- Strengthens unit readiness and reduces costs
through advances in force management and
modeling, selection and classification, and
leader development. - Transforms training by developing and
transitioning innovative training strategies,
media, and advanced training performance measures.
- Supports full spectrum operations through
personal protection, sustainment, and physical
performance technologies. - Includes combat clothing and individual
equipment combat rations and field-feeding
equipment logistics readiness physical aiding
and enhancement vehicle escape and crash safety
warrior survival and rescue aerial delivery and
dismounted, mounted, and aircrew warrior systems
integration, including warfighter systems
analysis.
9Human Systems Defense Technology Objectives
30 FY-03 DTOs
10Human Systems LaboratoriesExpand Your Community
Note DARPA is emerging as a player in Training.
11OSD Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
Program
Cognitive Readiness for TransformationalKnowledge
Systems
- FY-03 Thrusts
- Tools and techniques for conducting Cognitive
Task Analysis (CTA) and Cognitive Work Analysis
(CWA), and employing the results - Tools and techniques for conducting quantitative
trade studies - Human-centered design coordination processes and
tools
12Human Systems / Information Systems Workshop
?The Human Dimension in Future C4ISR Systems
- Purpose
- To help assure the human dimension of C4ISR is
deliberately addressed early in the information
system development cycle - To initiate, facilitate and, ultimately,
institutionalize effective cooperation between
Human Systems Professionals and Information
Systems Professionals in order to enhance the
warfighters' decision making capability - Goals and Objectives
- Identify issues facing the HS and IS communities
(common issues, particular issues, issues with
each other, issues with an outside agency) - Identify inhibitors to collaboration (political,
financial, cultural, organizational,
technological) - Identify similarities and differences between
metrics, measurements, tools and techniques used
by the HS and IS communities - Identify strategies to enhance collaboration
- Familiarize participants with case studies of
successful and unsuccessful HS and IS cooperation
and collaboration - Provide networking opportunities
13Workshop Findings Conclusions
- Problems, and therefore solutions, can be sorted
into three major areas - Acquisition process/cycle
- C4ISR development cycle
- Social and interpersonalfactors (e.g., culture,
education,language, communication, experiences,
trust, perceived value) - WHAT is needed and WHY
- Increased HS/IS cooperation and collaboration is
needed - To ensure usable and useful systems in the
increasingly information-rich, and information
dependent warfighting environment - HOW to do it
- Cooperate and collaborate through clearly defined
roles, a shared vision, management support, and
the use of appropriate concepts, methods, tools,
techniques, measures and metrics - Final report available on request
All of these areas must be addressed to build
better C4ISR systems.
14Key Challenges(or how to make HSI a no brainer)
- Quantifying impact (on fielded human-in-the-loop
capability, total ownership affordability) - Proving impact (establishing causal flow from the
practice of HSI) - Marketing impact (packaging the above and telling
the right people) - Drawing strength through outreach (across
components, disciplines, sectors, etc.) - Establishing strategic goals objectives for
improving the state of the practice (develop a
plan and execute it!)