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The Computer Journal Advance Access originally published online on September 12, 2007
The Computer Journal 2007 50(6):632-645; doi:10.1093/comjnl/bxm063
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The British Computer Society. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Hyperion—Next-Generation Battlespace Information Services

Robert Ghanea-Hercock1,*, E. Gelenbe2, Nicholas R. Jennings3, Oliver Smith4, David N. Allsopp5, Alex Healing1, Hakan Duman1, Simon Sparks5, Nishan C. Karunatillake3 and Perukrishnen Vytelingum3

1 Pervasive ICT Research Centre, BT, Ipswich, UK
2 Intelligent Systems and Networks Group, Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College, London SW7 2BT, UK
3 School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO1 7 1BJ, UK
4 General Dynamics UK Ltd, East Sussex, UK
5 QinetiQ, Malvern Technology Centre, St Andrews Road, Malvern, Worcestershire WR14 3PS, UK

* Corresponding author: robert.ghanea-hercock{at}bt.com

Received 14 May 2007; revised 14 May 2007

The future digital battlespace will be a fast-paced and frenetic environment that stresses information communication technology systems to the limit. The challenges are most acute in the tactical and operational domains where bandwidth is severely limited, security of information is paramount, the network is under physical and cyber attack and administrative support is minimal. Hyperion is a cluster of research projects designed to provide an automated and adaptive information management capability embedded in defence networks. The overall system architecture is designed to improve the situational awareness of field commanders by providing the ability to fuse and compose information services in real time. The key technologies adopted to enable this include: autonomous software agents, self-organizing middleware, a smart data filtering system and a 3-D battlespace simulation environment. This paper reviews some of the specific techniques under development within the Hyperion sub-projects and the results achieved to date.

Key Words: agents • autonomous systems • middleware • data visualization


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