Geneva Aerospace offers provably safe and certifiable control technologies for automatic and seamless mode transitions involving manual and automatic controls for a spectrum of piloted, optionally piloted, remotely operated, and autonomous air, land, and sea vehicles. The emphasis of the proposed effort is in the adaptation of our Variable Autonomy Control System to the optionally piloted air vehicle application to address the many technical and human factors issues surrounding cockpit automation. We will demonstrate that our approach is robust, reliable, and predictable. The proposed effort will further demonstrate that our common variable autonomy control architecture supports an entire gamut of moving platforms from piloted to autonomous with minimal changes required to support each specific platform. We will perform a dutiful survey of the existing human factors and taxonomy data associated with vehicle automation. Leveraging from our existing research in vehicle variable autonomy control, we will conduct a subsequent human effectiveness study to identify the appropriate human-system interface that maximizes operator situation awareness. Further, we will investigate the latest advancements in autonomous fault detection algorithms and select and incorporate those algorithms that show the most promise/feasibility and conduct trade studies on the effectiveness of these algorithms operating within our core architecture. The proposed research offers large commercialization potential, both within the DoD as well as the commercial UAV and civil aviation markets. The variable autonomy, fault tolerant control solutions have direct application to many DoD programs and initiatives such as the Uninhabited Combat Air Vehicle (UCAV) program, the Navy's Autonomous Operations initiative, and the Army's Future Combat Systems program. Additionally, the resulting control technologies will impact future commercial UAV applications within the US Forestry Service, the Coast Guard, the gas and oil industry, the power industry, and many others. Beyond the UAV industry, the technology resulting from the proposed effort affords the opportunity to make a profound impact in civil aviation safety by offering a safe, reliable, and certifiable control architecture enabling cockpit automation.
Keywords: Variable Autonomy Control, Gradient Control, Multi-Modal Control, Automatic Fault Detection, Fault Tolerant Systems, Situation Awareness, Civil