Army Launches Autonomous Vehicle Tests in Maryland

Army Launches Autonomous Vehicle Tests in Maryland

Army researchers recently began experimenting with unmanned, autonomous vehicles on land that was used to test munitions and weapons almost 100 years ago.


About 200 acres across the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Middle River, Maryland, now make up a modern military study site, where Army Research Laboratory officials are working to prove and refine the performance of the software framework and algorithms created to explore systems’ intelligence—and enable machines’ abilities to carry out specific tasks. 


“The one-of-its-kind research campus was established to advance Army knowledge of autonomy and intelligent systems through basic and applied research of unmanned technologies that integrate artificial intelligence, autonomy, robotics and human teaming elements in complex environments,” Jeffrey Westrich, an ARL program manager said in a statement Thursday.


Self-moving vehicles and robots hold potential to accomplish acts that could put troops’ lives at risk if done manually. 


Army researchers perform fully-autonomous tests using an unmanned ground vehicle test bed platform, which serves as the standard baseline configuration for multiple programmatic efforts within the DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory. (U.S. Army)

According to ARL’s release, scientists “performed the first fully-autonomous tests onsite using an unmanned ground vehicle testbed platform, which serves as the standard baseline configuration for multiple programmatic efforts within the laboratory,” earlier this year. A video spotlighting the work revealed the investigations were designed explicitly to capture sensory data about elements like fallen branches, rocks or bumpy terrain that can pose real problems for such robots operating in the real world. 


Generally, Army researchers have turned to simulat ..

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