Back to Search Start Over

Ethical mission definition and execution for maritime robotic vehicles: a practical approach

Authors :
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Information Sciences (IS)
Davis, Duane
Brutzman, Don
Blais, Curtis
McGhee, Robert
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Information Sciences (IS)
Davis, Duane
Brutzman, Don
Blais, Curtis
McGhee, Robert
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Many types of robotic vehicles are increasingly utilized in both civilian and military maritime missions. Some amount of human supervision is typically present in such operations, thereby ensuring appropriate accountability in case of mission accidents or errors. However, there is growing interest in augmenting the degree of independence of such vehicles, up to and including full autonomy. A primary challenge in the face of reduced operator oversight is to maintain full human responsibility for ethical robot behavior. Informed by decades of direct involvement in both naval operations and unmanned systems research, this work proposes a new mathematical formalism that maintains human accountability at every level of robot mission planning and execution. This formalism is based on extending a fully general model for digital computation, known as a Turing machine. This extension, called a Mission Execution Automaton (MEA), allows communication with one or more “external agents” that interact with the physical world and respond to queries/commands from the MEA while observing human-defined ethical constraints. An important MEA feature is that it is language independent and results in mission definitions equally well suited to human or robot execution (or any arbitrary combination). Formal description logics are used to enforce mission structure and semantics, provide operator assurance of correct mission definition, and ensure suitability of a mission definition for execution by a specific vehicle, all prior to mission parsing and execution. Computer simulation examples show the value of such a Mission Execution Ontology (MEO). The flexibility of the MEA formalism is illustrated by application to a prototypical multiphase area search and sample mission. This paper presents an entirely new approach to achieving a practical and fully testable means for ethical mission definition and execution. This work demonstrates that ensuring ethical behavior during mission execution i

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn981473112
Document Type :
Electronic Resource