Tactical Behaviors for Autonomous Maneuver
Agency: Dept of the Army -- Materiel Command
Assistance Listings: 12.630 -- Basic, Applied, and Advanced Research in Science and Engineering
Description
**UPDATE 5 APRIL 2024: The proposal submission date has been updated to 24 April 2024. The FOA has been amended to reflect this submission date and include a Question and Answer document based on questions received from interested applicants. Other than the updated proposal submission date in the FOA, the actual FOA Amendment has not been changed. However, the answers provided in the Q&A document are considered part of the FOA Amendment.**
**CYCLE 2 UPDATE 20 MARCH 2024 - THE OPPORTUNITY WEBINAR FOR CYCLE 2 WILL BE HELD ONLINE VIA MS TEAMS AT 1500 EDT ON 22 MARCH 2024 AT THE FOLLOWING LINK:
**UPDATE 14 MARCH 2024 - CYCLE 2 HAS BEEN POSTED TO THE ANNOUNCEMENT. PLEASE REVIEW THE UPDATED ANNOUNCEMENT IN FULL FOR SUBMISSION TIME, UPDATED TOPIC, AND FUNDING AMOUNT AND SCHEDULE CHANGES FROM CYCLE 1**
TACTICAL BEHAVIORS FOR AUTONOMOUS MANEUVER COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH PROGRAM (TBAM-CRP)
Future Army forces will be called upon to operate and maneuver in multi-domain
operations (MDO), against a modern and capable peer adversary. The battlefield of the future
may impose additional constraints on maneuver forces such as disruption in communication as
well as positioning services. To field a highly capable fighting force in this future battlefield,
novel tactics and doctrines leveraging nascent technologies in robotics and autonomous systems
(RAS) will need to be developed. Teams of RAS will serve an increasingly critical role in the
future force to deliver situational awareness, defend key locations or positions, or take point in
dynamic and hazardous situations. Resilience to disruptions, failures, or unexpected scenarios, is
a key quality for teams of RAS to operate alongside other future Army forces. The US Army
Combat Capabilities Development Command (DEVCOM) Army Research Laboratory (ARL) is
focused on developing fundamental understanding and informing the art-of-the-possible for
warfighter concepts through research to greatly improve the scope of mission capabilities of
teams of RAS, develop robust and resilient approaches to plan under extreme conditions of
uncertainty, to learn coordinated strategies for groups of agents to achieve a common objective,
all within a complex maneuver environment including adversaries. The Tactical Behaviors for
Autonomous Maneuver Collaborative Research Program (TBAM-CRP) is focused on developing
and experimentally evaluating coordinated and individual behaviors for small groups of
autonomous agents to learn doctrinal as well as novel tactics for maneuvering in military relevant
environments. The TBAM-CRP will leverage developments in other internal and extramural
programs as well as identify new research directions to find novel solutions to these maneuver
problems in analogical simulations representing complex realistic terrain.
The Tactical Behaviors for Autonomous Maneuver Collaborative Research Program (TBAM-CRP) will
consist of a series of sprint efforts executed with annual program reviews. Each topic will be focused on
addressing a different set of scientific areas which will support the research aims of an associated ARL
researcher from a related internal essential research program (ERP) or mission-funded program.
The TBAM-CRP has been developed in coordination with other related ARL-funded collaborative efforts
(see descriptions of ARL collaborative alliances at https://www.arl.army.mil/business/collaborativealliances/)
and shares a common vision of highly collaborative academia-industry-government
partnerships; however, it will be executed with a program model adapted from the Scalable, Adaptive,
and Resilient Autonomy (SARA), which established a new paradigm for collaborative research. Some
key properties of this new approach are described below:
• TBAM-CRP sprint topics will be offered on a two-year cycle. Proposals will be solicited for a
possible two-year period structured as a first-year pilot followed by a second-year option where
the option may be awarded based upon progress assessed at an annual review. The FOA will be
amended annually to identify a specific problem statement and scope for that specific cycle. The
topics for each cycle will be chosen to address the long-term program goal.
• Five new topics (Cycles 1-5) are expected in FY22, 24, 26, 28, 30. Each topic will be carefully
chosen based on the previous accomplishments in the prior cycle(s), the development of new
technologies and capabilities in the broader research and development communities, and the
Army’s evolving needs for future capabilities.
• For each topic, funding will be provided to those Recipients selected under a cooperative
agreement (CA).
• Enhanced Research Program funding from ARL or Other Government Agencies (OGAs) may
become available during a cycle which provides a mechanism for growth and enhancement within
the TBAM-CRP. A proposal should not include any discussion of the Enhanced Research
Program. Recipients receiving a CA will be notified and provided details if the opportunity for
Enhanced Research Program funding becomes available during their award period of
performance.
• There is no limitation on the place of performance, although on-site collaboration at ARL
facilities and with ARL researchers as well as with other Recipients are encouraged. Research
outcomes in this program must, at the very least, be demonstrated in sophisticated simulations of
relevant environments. Together with ARL collaborators, these results may be adapted for higher
TRL experimentation on surrogate platforms at ARL test facilities such as the Robotics Research
Collaboration Campus (R2C2) at Graces Quarters, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland.
• Recipients will be furnished with access to the ARL Autonomy Stack software suite as well as all
relevant simulation tools and multi-agent learning support.
• Recipients will be provided with information about the current state of the Autonomous Systems
Enterprise (ASE) with an overview of developments in the associated collaborative research
alliances including Distributed and Collaborative Intelligent Systems and Technology (DCIST),
Scalable, Adaptive, and Resilient Autonomy (SARA), as well as internal ARL essential research
programs including the AI for Maneuver and Mobility (AIMM), Emerging Overmatch
Technologies (EOT), and Versatile Tactical Power and Propulsion (VICTOR). Capabilities
demonstrated in simulation should reflect significant appropriate developments. This midpoint
review is expected to take place as a mini symposium where Recipients can share results with
one another along with the ARL community to foster further collaboration.
• At the end of the second year, a capstone demonstration will be executed by those Recipients
receiving an option to their award in a set of simulated relevant environments, either those
environment scenarios provided by the Government and other program performers, or optionally
of a specific environment developed by the Recipient to exhibit their developed capability. Any
system level capability demonstration that can be made with the internal ARL collaborator or
description of capability development and program contribution can also be made at this time.
These system demonstrations are expected to coincide to foster further integration and adoption
with related internal research programs as well as partner organizations from within the
DEVCOM, other Army and DoD service branches and agencies, in addition to other government
agencies.
Proposals that follow the requirements of the FOA will be evaluated in accordance with merit-based,
competitive procedures. These procedures will include evaluation factors and an adjectival and color
rating system. A review team, consisting of a qualified group of Government scientists and managers
will evaluate the compliant proposals and provide the results of that evaluation to the decision-maker for
the Government. Relevant internal research program materials approved for public release and contact
information will be provided to potential proposers during introductory presentations to help facilitate
identification of collaboration between proposers and individual ARL researchers or internal research
programs. Additional connections to ARL programs can be identified during the proposal review process.
Eligible applicants under this FOA include institutions of higher education, nonprofit organizations, and
for-profit organizations (i.e., large and small businesses) for scientific research in the knowledge domains
outlined throughout this Funding Opportunity. Federally Funded Research and Development Centers
(FFRDC) may propose as well, with effort as allowed by their sponsoring agency and in accordance with
their sponsoring agency policy.
Eligibility
Eligible applicants
Miscellaneous
- Other
Additional information
Grantor contact information
Description
TBAM-CRP Email Address
Documents
File name | Description | Last updated |
---|---|---|
TBAM_FOA_Cycle_2_Amendment_Question_and_Answer_Document_.pdf | TBAM FOA Cycle 2 Amendment Question and Answer Document | Apr 5, 2024 08:28 PM UTC |
W911NF-22-S-0011_CYCLE_2_Tactical_Behaviors_FOA_Amendment.pdf | TBAM-CRP CYCLE 2 Funding Opportunity Announcement | Apr 5, 2024 08:29 PM UTC |
Link to additional information
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Closing: --
Proposals for Cycle 2 are due no later than 24 April 2024.
Award
$--
Program Funding
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Expected awards
$100,000
Award Minimum
$2,300,000
Award Maximum
Funding opportunity number:
W911NF-22-S-0011
Cost sharing or matching requirement:
Funding instrument type:
Cooperative agreement
Opportunity Category:
Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Category of Funding Activity:
Science technology and other research and development
Category Explanation:
History
Version:
8
Posted date:
April 22, 2022
Archive date:
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