DOD Funds National Information Fusion Center
Focus ranges
from urban warfare and homeland security to disease
outbreaks
BUFFALO,
N.Y. -- A new U.S. Department of Defense-funded
center based at CUBRC and the University at Buffalo will provide the U.S. armed
forces with critical technologies to enhance major national security
initiatives, such as aiding the hunt for weapons of mass destruction and
providing accurate intelligence information to support operations and
decision-making.
The
National
Center for Multi-Source
Information Fusion Research will centralize research and development efforts in
the field of "information fusion."
Information
fusion allows users to assess complex situations more accurately by combining
effectively the core evidence in the massive, diverse and sometimes conflicting
data received from multiple sources, ranging from remote satellites and sensors
to personnel, such as commanders and intelligence agents in the
field.
The $1
million grant from the Department of Defense establishes the center as a single
point of access to research and development in information fusion for the
nation's defense, intelligence and homeland security communities, while also
developing the field for medical and business
applications.
"Information
fusion can address military problems associated with the primary inability, for
example, of intelligence analysts to accurately correlate massive amounts of
information coming from many sources into a clear picture of the situation or
threat," explained Michael D. Moskal, director of CUBRC's Information
Exploitation business sector and research associate professor in the UB School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
The center
will develop algorithms and software programs to track individual "targets,"
such as a ship or an airplane, and to establish relationships between targets
and attempt to predict where they might be going and why.
"These
tools will be able to provide enhanced situational awareness to a commander so
he or she can make a decision, determining not only what a particular object or
target is, but what it might be trying to do," Moskal
said.
The center
plans to roll out prototype software programs for both military and non-military
government agencies within the next year to 18 months; longer-term challenges
related to national and homeland security also will be addressed.
"We're
addressing problems that are current national priorities," said Moskal, "such as
threats to critical infrastructure, such as large computer networks and
providing incident commanders with better information when responding to
disasters or other high consequence events."
In one
such effort, Moises Sudit, Ph.D., managing director of the center and UB
professor of industrial engineering, is developing with colleagues a software
program called "Event Correlation for CyberAttack Recognition System" designed
to help information security analysts better recognize and respond to
large-scale, coordinated attacks on computer network
systems.
Principles
of that system also will be applied to urban warfare operations, as well as to
nonmilitary events, such as outbreaks of diseases, whether they occur naturally,
such as bird flu, or are the result of bioterrorism.
Other
tools being developed by the center include new methods of signal processing,
complex inferencing and estimation methods, and new visualization and
human-computer interfacing technologies.
Moskal
explained that because of its data mining component, information fusion also has
many applications to nonmilitary research, such as in assessing accurately
complicated medical data for diagnosis and
treatment.
The
awarding of the center to CUBRC/UB as the lead institution stems from its strong
history as a pioneer in information fusion, starting with the Center for
Multi-Source Information Fusion at UB, launched with funding from the Air Force
in 1996 by James Llinas, Ph.D., UB professor of industrial engineering and
systems.
Llinas is
executive director of the new center.
Driven by
its continued strong links to the armed forces, and its emphasis on addressing
national security needs, the center has developed a more multidisciplinary and
systems-level approach to the field than some other institutions, Llinas
explained.
CUBRC/UB's
partners in the center are the Rochester Institute of Technology, which has
expertise in image analysis and visualization, and Pennsylvania State
University, which also has a long history in information fusion research focused
on the human and cognitive aspects.
Moskal
noted that the center will provide a critical educational function for UB
students and is envisioned as eventually providing an economic development
benefit for Western New
York.
"We want
to provide employment for these people that we educate and train in this highly
specialized area rather than lose them to other defense contractors out of
state," he said.
CUBRC is
an independent, not-for-profit company headquartered in Buffalo. Formed in 1983 by
UB and the former Calspan Corp., CUBRC's mission is to generate technological
and economic growth in Western New York by
bringing together scientists and engineers from its own staff, academia and
industry that form multi-disciplinary teams to execute a wide variety of
research and development programs for the defense intelligence, homeland
security and medical research communities.
The
University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public
university, the largest and most comprehensive campus in the State University of
New York.