DocumentCode
709143
Title
Shared UAV enterprise operator pooling framework (SUAVE) chance constrained pooled fan-out queueing analysis
Author
Bush, Lawrence A. M.
Author_Institution
MIT Lincoln Lab., Lexington, MA, USA
fYear
2015
fDate
9-12 March 2015
Firstpage
21
Lastpage
27
Abstract
The number of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in the Air Force inventory is rapidly increasing without a concomitant increase in manpower. Military planners are currently seeking technologies that enable operators to simultaneously control a greater number of UAVs. The technology planning and recommendation process requires a systems-level engineering analysis of UAV operations and their sensitivity to various constraints. Olsen and Wood introduced a concept called fan-out, which estimates how many operators are required to effectively operate a given set of UAVs. The fan-out concept assumes that UAVs are permanently assigned to a single operator or operator team. We designed a pooled UAV-to-operator team allocation scheme, which allows sharing of operator team resources across the entire UAV fleet. Rather than permanently assigning a given UAV to an operator team, our architecture dynamically allocates operator teams to UAVs on an as-needed basis during multi-UAV operations. We constructed an architecture based on queueing theory to empirically compare pooled and non-pooled performance. Queueing systems analysis of this architecture demonstrates that it performs better than a non-teaming approach. Moreover, our architectural analysis leads to a more general definition of fanout. More importantly, the closed-form queueing analysis is highly efficient, allowing us to analyze a greater number of problem configurations. This greater command of the problem space also offers advantages in determining appropriate autonomy and teaming technologies for further development.
Keywords
autonomous aerial vehicles; military aircraft; multi-robot systems; queueing theory; Air Force inventory; SUAVE framework; chance constrained pooled fan-out queueing analysis; fan-out concept; military planners; pooled UAV-to-operator team allocation scheme; recommendation process; shared UAV enterprise operator pooling framework; systems-level engineering analysis; technology planning process; unmanned aerial vehicles; Mathematical model; Measurement; Queueing analysis; Resource management; Sociology; Statistics; System analysis and design; chance constraints; fan-out; human-robot interaction; queueing theory;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cognitive Methods in Situation Awareness and Decision Support (CogSIMA), 2015 IEEE International Inter-Disciplinary Conference on
Conference_Location
Orlando, FL
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/COGSIMA.2015.7107970
Filename
7107970
Link To Document