
Proceedings Paper
Addressing information management and dissemination challenges for the next generation analystFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
Recent technological advances in the areas of sensors, computation, and storage have led to the development of relatively inexpensive sensors that have been deployed on a wide scale and are able to generate large volumes of data. However, tactical networks have not been able to keep pace in terms of their ability to transfer all of the sensor data from the edge to an operations center for analysis. This paper explores multiple techniques to help bridge this gap, by using a three-pronged approach based on value of information-based dissemination, active sensor query capabilities, and anomaly detection mechanisms. These capabilities are being integrated into an open-source sensor platform deployed in a testbed environment for evaluation purposes.
Paper Details
Date Published: 27 May 2015
PDF: 13 pages
Proc. SPIE 9499, Next-Generation Analyst III, 94990C (27 May 2015); doi: 10.1117/12.2184176
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 9499:
Next-Generation Analyst III
Barbara D. Broome; Timothy P. Hanratty; David L. Hall; James Llinas, Editor(s)
PDF: 13 pages
Proc. SPIE 9499, Next-Generation Analyst III, 94990C (27 May 2015); doi: 10.1117/12.2184176
Show Author Affiliations
Jesse Kovach, U.S. Army Research Lab. (United States)
Laurel Sadler, U.S. Army Research Lab. (United States)
Laurel Sadler, U.S. Army Research Lab. (United States)
Niranjan Suri, U.S. Army Research Lab. (United States)
Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (United States)
Robert Winkler, U.S. Army Research Lab. (United States)
Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (United States)
Robert Winkler, U.S. Army Research Lab. (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 9499:
Next-Generation Analyst III
Barbara D. Broome; Timothy P. Hanratty; David L. Hall; James Llinas, Editor(s)
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