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GLOBALLY ENGAGED ACQUISITION ENTERPRISE


“Where the Army is, the Army trains. As haptic-enabled TESS is deployed, the Army will use globally as needed.”


“Te current Live Tactical Engagement Simulation Systems use audio alters for near miss and assessment, which also provides an alert to nearby opposing Soldiers,” said Mark Dasher, product lead for STE LTS. “Use of haptics will provide a silent alert when battlefield effects occur. Additionally, tactical haptics will intro- duce new training capabilities such as loading ‘training round’ into a 155 mm howitzer.”


During live force-on-force training, the integration of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) is going to be a key focus area for live prototyping


efforts at many levels, Dasher said. For this training, real Soldiers, using real equipment


in physical environments,


engage in simulated combat against other live participants—with the addition of synthetic computer-generated elements to enhance realism and complexity. “First, we are applying AI/ML in engagements allowing proper combat techniques [e.g., target lead and site elevation],” Dasher said. Tis will provide real-time, data- driven feedback, as AI creates moving targets and realistic conditions, while ML adapts training to individual skill levels, analyzing performance to refine accuracy and decision-making. “We believe that


AI/ML will provide a continuous evalua- tion of Soldier and unit actions, enabling better unit training strategies. In the future, AI/ML will support small-unit train- ing without the need of trainers, exercise control, OPFOR [Opposing Forces] or external enablers.”


Live training systems are utilized not just by the Army but also by other services, particularly the U.S. Marine Corps (USMC). “We work closely with PM TRASYS [Program Manager for Train- ing Systems], our USMC counterparts in modernization efforts,” Bahbaz said. “Tey participate in our Soldier touch points and provide valuable feedback to our team.”


Bahbaz said PEO STRI has also forged a solid partnership with the Program Exec- utive Office for Intelligence, Electronic Warfare and Sensors, Project Linchpin, the Army’s first artificial intelligence pipe- line to deliver AI and ML capabilities to sensors for faster and more accurate deci- sion-making in collaboration with the STE cross-functional team.


STING OPERATION


The Stinger training system, which is being developed by PEO STRI as part of the STE-Live Direct Fires program, provides realistic and immersive training for Soldiers. (Photo by Ariana Aubuchon, PEO STRI)


“We have successfully released, jointly, a request for information that communi- cates AI needs for Army training. Tis is part of our STRI to efficiently accel- erate AI adoption across the training portfolio and specifically in [the] STE program, starting with live.” Bahbaz said he received 82 responses spanning tradi- tional (defense-focused industries) and non-traditional (commercial business with advanced commercial technologies, partic- ularly in the digital space) with diverse


https://asc.ar my.mil 19


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