SFMS Using Multisensory Ontologies
Navy SBIR FY2010.1


Sol No.: Navy SBIR FY2010.1
Topic No.: N101-103
Topic Title: SFMS Using Multisensory Ontologies
Proposal No.: N101-103-0324
Firm: Modus Operandi, Inc.
709 South Harbor City Blvd., Suite 400
Melbourne, Florida 32901-1936
Contact: Kent Bimson
Phone: (321) 473-1446
Web Site: http://www.modusoperandi.com
Abstract: Navy warfighters are being inundated with information, yet they often lack the "contextual knowledge" that helps them quickly understand-or "visualize"-the situation in order to make rapid, yet effective, decisions. We propose to develop a Spatial Framework Mapping System (SFMS) based on an innovative multisensory ontology architectural concept. We define a multisensory ontology as semantic model that not only relates visual artifacts to each other, as in the Spatial Data Artifact Taxonomy, but to other sensory artifacts as well, such as video, voice, photos, and touch-points, to create an "immersive knowledge environment" for Navy decision-makers. Our goal is to improve information understanding for decision-makers, as well as improving the overall quality of their decisions, by engaging critical human senses more directly in situational understanding. As a foundational component of SFMS, we also propose to develop a Spatial Data Artifacts Library to store and access sparkline-type artifacts, as well as authoring and administration tools to support technical staff in mapping the artifacts to complex datasets, configuring artifacts for use in new applications, and managing the evolution of the SFMS software and data. Finally, we propose to develop metrics that measure the effectiveness of SFMS in improving information "understanding" and "decision quality" for users.
Benefits: (1) Multisensory knowledge immersion for decision-makers leading to improved situational understanding and decision quality; (2) Library of reusable spatial data artifacts organized as a taxonomy; (3) Semantically links spatial data artifacts to data and other sensory artifacts via multisensory ontology; (4) Specific SITREP application immediately useful to Navy; (5) Generalized semantic SOA reusable across new applications and data sources; (6) Leverages Modus Operandi, Inc.'s semantic technologies developed on other SBIR projects.

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