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Microgames for Acquiring and Rehearsing Cognitive Schemas for Perception (MARCS)
Navy SBIR FY2011.2
| Sol No.: |
Navy SBIR FY2011.2 |
| Topic No.: |
N112-162 |
| Topic Title: |
Microgames for Acquiring and Rehearsing Cognitive Schemas for Perception (MARCS) |
| Proposal No.: |
N112-162-0462 |
| Firm: |
Charles River Analytics Inc. 625 Mount Auburn Street
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 |
| Contact: |
Sean Guarino |
| Phone: |
(617) 491-3474 |
| Web Site: |
www.cra.com |
| Abstract: |
In the last decade, Marines have been challenged by an unconventional warfare environment where they are hunted by snipers and terrorists. To improve combat effectiveness, the USMC has implemented the Combat Hunter Program, focused on teaching Marines perceptual skills needed to become the hunter, rather than the hunted. These skills rely on establishing cognitive baselines, or schemas, that identify what should-and should not-be expected in combat settings. This Combat Hunter training has focused on specific cognitive schemas for current deployment settings. However, even small changes to these settings require significantly changing these schemas. To enable context switching and skill transfer, Marines need tools to train the meta-cognitive skills to construct and adapt cognitive schemas to new settings. Successful training tools will be accessible to the Marines who must use them, minimizing the burden of acquisition and rehearsal, engaging Marines in the training process, and providing meaningful and encouraging feedback. To address these requirements, we propose to design and demonstrate the feasibility of Microgames for Acquiring and Rehearsing Cognitive Schemas for Perception (MARCS), a suite of light-weight deployable games focused on teaching Combat Hunters to construct or adapt schemas for particular settings or situations to enhance perception of threats. |
| Benefits: |
MARCS will have immediate and tangible benefits for training in the Combat Hunter Program, providing training tools that teach the meta-cognitive skills needed to construct new cognitive schemas and adapt to new situations. MARCS will augment other existing and emerging perceptual training tools by providing the fundamental skills needed to more effectively transfer perceptual skills to other combat settings and situations. MARCS will similarly be useful in a range of other Federal applications, supporting FBI agents, homeland security investigators, and TSA officers in rapidly adapting their perceptual skills to new environments. |
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