"During a recent US Army and NATO exercise in Europe, troops used a homegrown AI system to consume and sort data. The valuewasn't strictlythat the AI could do it faster but rather that it could remember context and patterns that humans couldn't. The case from the Dynamic Front exercise is another example of how the US military is increasingly implementing AI and automation into everything from enemy attack simulations to paperwork."
""The modern battlefield, what we're already seeing across the globe, it is swimming in sensors, and we are drowning in data," Col. Jeff Pickler, the Army 2nd Multi-Domain Task Force commander, said at a media roundtable on Dynamic Front. There aren't enough people to decipher all the available information, he said. "They will never be able to fully process all of that.""
The modern battlefield is saturated with sensors and networked weapons that generate far more data than soldiers can realistically process alone. The Army is shifting from simply fielding more sensors to managing information overload with artificial intelligence and automation. A homegrown AI system consumed and sorted battlefield data during the Dynamic Front exercise in Europe, demonstrating that AI can retain context and detect patterns humans may miss, not just process data faster. The AI software remains in beta, and leaders plan to scale testing by merging Dynamic Front with Arcane Front to process theater-level target sets, potentially upwards of 1,500 targets.
Read at Business Insider
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