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Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation

Complex maritime missions, both above and below the surface, have traditionally been carried out by manned surface ships and submarines equipped with advanced sensor systems. Unmanned Maritime Vehicles (UMVs) are increasingly demonstrating their potential for improving existing naval capabilities du...

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Autores principales: Costanzi, Riccardo, Fenucci, Davide, Manzari, Vincenzo, Micheli, Michele, Morlando, Luca, Terracciano, Daniele, Caiti, Andrea, Stifani, Mirko, Tesei, Alessandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7805912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33501258
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2020.00091
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author Costanzi, Riccardo
Fenucci, Davide
Manzari, Vincenzo
Micheli, Michele
Morlando, Luca
Terracciano, Daniele
Caiti, Andrea
Stifani, Mirko
Tesei, Alessandra
author_facet Costanzi, Riccardo
Fenucci, Davide
Manzari, Vincenzo
Micheli, Michele
Morlando, Luca
Terracciano, Daniele
Caiti, Andrea
Stifani, Mirko
Tesei, Alessandra
author_sort Costanzi, Riccardo
collection PubMed
description Complex maritime missions, both above and below the surface, have traditionally been carried out by manned surface ships and submarines equipped with advanced sensor systems. Unmanned Maritime Vehicles (UMVs) are increasingly demonstrating their potential for improving existing naval capabilities due to their rapid deployability, easy scalability, and high reconfigurability, offering a reduction in both operational time and cost. In addition, they mitigate the risk to personnel by leaving the man far-from-the-risk but in-the-loop of decision making. In the long-term, a clear interoperability framework between unmanned systems, human operators, and legacy platforms will be crucial for effective joint operations planning and execution. However, the present multi-vendor multi-protocol solutions in multi-domain UMVs activities are hard to interoperate without common mission control interfaces and communication protocol schemes. Furthermore, the underwater domain presents significant challenges that cannot be satisfied with the solutions developed for terrestrial networks. In this paper, the interoperability topic is discussed blending a review of the technological growth from 2000 onwards with recent authors' in-field experience; finally, important research directions for the future are given. Within the broad framework of interoperability in general, the paper focuses on the aspect of interoperability among UMVs not neglecting the role of the human operator in the loop. The picture emerging from the review demonstrates that interoperability is currently receiving a high level of attention with a great and diverse deal of effort. Besides, the manuscript describes the experience from a sea trial exercise, where interoperability has been demonstrated by integrating heterogeneous autonomous UMVs into the NATO Centre for Maritime Research and Experimentation (CMRE) network, using different robotic middlewares and acoustic modem technologies to implement a multistatic active sonar system. A perspective for the interoperability in marine robotics missions emerges in the paper, through a discussion of current capabilities, in-field experience and future advanced technologies unique to UMVs. Nonetheless, their application spread is slowed down by the lack of human confidence. In fact, an interoperable system-of-systems of autonomous UMVs will require operators involved only at a supervisory level. As trust develops, endorsed by stable and mature interoperability, human monitoring will be diminished to exploit the tremendous potential of fully autonomous UMVs.
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spelling pubmed-78059122021-01-25 Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation Costanzi, Riccardo Fenucci, Davide Manzari, Vincenzo Micheli, Michele Morlando, Luca Terracciano, Daniele Caiti, Andrea Stifani, Mirko Tesei, Alessandra Front Robot AI Robotics and AI Complex maritime missions, both above and below the surface, have traditionally been carried out by manned surface ships and submarines equipped with advanced sensor systems. Unmanned Maritime Vehicles (UMVs) are increasingly demonstrating their potential for improving existing naval capabilities due to their rapid deployability, easy scalability, and high reconfigurability, offering a reduction in both operational time and cost. In addition, they mitigate the risk to personnel by leaving the man far-from-the-risk but in-the-loop of decision making. In the long-term, a clear interoperability framework between unmanned systems, human operators, and legacy platforms will be crucial for effective joint operations planning and execution. However, the present multi-vendor multi-protocol solutions in multi-domain UMVs activities are hard to interoperate without common mission control interfaces and communication protocol schemes. Furthermore, the underwater domain presents significant challenges that cannot be satisfied with the solutions developed for terrestrial networks. In this paper, the interoperability topic is discussed blending a review of the technological growth from 2000 onwards with recent authors' in-field experience; finally, important research directions for the future are given. Within the broad framework of interoperability in general, the paper focuses on the aspect of interoperability among UMVs not neglecting the role of the human operator in the loop. The picture emerging from the review demonstrates that interoperability is currently receiving a high level of attention with a great and diverse deal of effort. Besides, the manuscript describes the experience from a sea trial exercise, where interoperability has been demonstrated by integrating heterogeneous autonomous UMVs into the NATO Centre for Maritime Research and Experimentation (CMRE) network, using different robotic middlewares and acoustic modem technologies to implement a multistatic active sonar system. A perspective for the interoperability in marine robotics missions emerges in the paper, through a discussion of current capabilities, in-field experience and future advanced technologies unique to UMVs. Nonetheless, their application spread is slowed down by the lack of human confidence. In fact, an interoperable system-of-systems of autonomous UMVs will require operators involved only at a supervisory level. As trust develops, endorsed by stable and mature interoperability, human monitoring will be diminished to exploit the tremendous potential of fully autonomous UMVs. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7805912/ /pubmed/33501258 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2020.00091 Text en Copyright © 2020 Costanzi, Fenucci, Manzari, Micheli, Morlando, Terracciano, Caiti, Stifani and Tesei. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Robotics and AI
Costanzi, Riccardo
Fenucci, Davide
Manzari, Vincenzo
Micheli, Michele
Morlando, Luca
Terracciano, Daniele
Caiti, Andrea
Stifani, Mirko
Tesei, Alessandra
Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation
title Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation
title_full Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation
title_fullStr Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation
title_full_unstemmed Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation
title_short Interoperability Among Unmanned Maritime Vehicles: Review and First In-field Experimentation
title_sort interoperability among unmanned maritime vehicles: review and first in-field experimentation
topic Robotics and AI
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7805912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33501258
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2020.00091
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