Title :
Architecture requirements for Ethical, accurate, and resilient Unmanned Aerial Personal Remote Sensing
Author :
Coopmans, Calvin
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Utah State Univ., Logan, UT, USA
Abstract :
It is undisputed that number of Unmanned Aerial Systems (UASs) will increase in the coming years. Small unmanned aerial scientific remote sensing systems or “data drones” have great potential to assist the human race with difficult problems such as water management and biofuel production, provided these systems can be integrated properly into society and airspace. The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ideally will present rules for integrating UASs into National Aerospace System (NAS) by 2015. Ethics, safety, and data quality are the fundamental architectural components required for successful operation of autonomous aerial remote sensing systems, enabling integration into society and ultimately providing the benefits of these emerging technologies. In aviation, safety is the primary concern. In case of UAS and Personal Remote Sensing (PRS), the sole purpose of flight is to collect data; thus data is the Mission (i.e., the sole reason for airspace usage). Ethical principles for collection of information and personal privacy must also be included, to justify the use of UASs in civil (public) airspace while upholding the rights expected by civilians. Policies, standards, and agreements on architecture are necessary for producing systems which adhere to these fundamentals; aerial systems must include these basic properties in their designs to allow for lasting harmony between society and unmanned systems. In this paper, it is shown that any architecture which accomplishes this integration task must be compliant with the Architecture for Ethical Remote Information Sensing (AERIS) requirements. Several existing consumer-grade SUASs are evaluated based on these criteria and suggestions for AERIS compliance are given.
Keywords :
air safety; autonomous aerial vehicles; ethical aspects; government policies; mobile robots; AERIS compliance; AERIS requirements; Architecture for Ethical Remote Information Sensing requirements; FAA; NAS; National Aerospace System; PRS; US Federal Aviation Administration; agreements; airspace usage; architectural components; architecture requirements; autonomous aerial remote sensing system; aviation; biofuel production; civil airspace; consumer-grade SUAS; data collection; data drones; data quality; ethical principles; ethics; information collection; personal privacy; policies; public airspace; resilient unmanned aerial personal remote sensing; safety; small unmanned aerial scientific remote sensing system; standards; unmanned aerial systems; water management; Computer architecture; Data privacy; Ethics; Process control; Remote sensing; Robots; Safety;
Conference_Titel :
Unmanned Aircraft Systems (ICUAS), 2014 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
DOI :
10.1109/ICUAS.2014.6842233