Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!uunet!zephyr.ens.tek.com!uw-beaver!uw-june!jon From: jon@cs.washington.edu (Jon Jacky) Newsgroups: comp.robotics Subject: Re: Battlefield Robotics (?) Summary: Book on battlefield robotics (etc.) recommended Message-ID: <12918@june.cs.washington.edu> Date: 29 Aug 90 18:23:22 GMT References: <59189@bbn.BBN.COM> Distribution: na Organization: U of Washington, Computer Science, Seattle Lines: 59 > bpalmer@BBN.COM (Brian Palmer) asks about battlefield robots... The Department of Defense has been very interested in this for a long time and has spent a great deal of money on it. In fact it is probably fair to say that this idea has been the stated motivation for most federally-supported R&D in computer science (not just robotics) in the United States since about 1983, including "pure" research at universities. The best review of all this is the 1987 book, COMPUTERS IN BATTLE (details below). The perspective of most of the authors is quite skeptical and critical; whether or not you agree, this book is by far the most comprehensive account available, and its very plentiful references will guide you to lots of technical literature and a whole spectrum of views. The chapters most pertinent to your question about robotics are the ones by Gary Chapman and the one by me. Jon Jacky, University of Washington, Seattle jon@gaffer.rad.washington.edu -------------------- 'Computers In Battle' edited by David Bellin and Gary Chapman. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987, $14.95. xiv + 362 pages, including Bibliography, Resources, Index. ISBN 0-15-121232-5 Table of Contents Computers in Battle: A Human Overview Severo Ornstein A History of Computers and Weapons Systems Paul N. Edwards The New Generation of High-Technology Weapons Gary Chapman Computer System Reliability and Nuclear War Alan Borning Computer and the Strategic Defense Initiative Eric Roberts and Steve Berlin The Strategic Computing Program Jonathan Jacky Computers in Weapons: The Limits of Confidence David Lorge Parnas Artificial Intelligence as Military Technology Tom Athanasiou High Technology and the Emerging Dual Economy Lenny Siegel and John Markoff The Role of Military Funding in Academic Computer Science Clark Thomborson Computers and War: Philosophical Reflections on Ends and Means John Ladd