US Special Ops Forces Want in on AI to Cut 'Cognitive Load' for Operators
2 Articles
2 Articles
US special ops forces want in on AI to cut ‘cognitive load’ and make operator jobs easier
It’s not just AI in drones and weapons systems. It’s back-end paperwork, too. US Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Bill Guilliam From warfighting to paperwork, US Special Operations Forces are interested in getting in on AI to simplify the work. The goal for these elite forces, much like it is for regular people working office jobs and using AI to sort data or compile information, is to lessen the overall cognitive load, or mental effort…
US special ops forces want in on AI to cut 'cognitive load' for operators
It's not just AI in drones and weapons systems. It's back-end paperwork, too.US Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Bill GuilliamUS special operations is using artificial intelligence to reduce the cognitive load on operators.This includes not just combat operations but also paperwork, manual tasks, and data.Various types of AI are already being employed and expanded.From warfighting to paperwork, US Special Operations Forces are intereste…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources lean Right
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage