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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF OCTOBER 24,1997 PSA#1958R&D Contracting Directorate, Bldg 7, 2530 C Street, WPAFB, OH
45433-7607 A -- SENSOR TECHNOLOGIES INTEGRATION LABORATORY -- PART 1 OF 3 SOL
PRDA No. 97-18-AAK POC Contact Alan Struckman, Contract Negotiator,
937-255-2902, or Vicki A. Fry, Contracting Officer, 937-255-2902 WEB:
Click here to view supplemental package,
http://www.wl.wpafb.af.mil/contract/hp.htm. E-MAIL: Click here to
contact the Contract Negotiator, struckac@aa.wpafb.af.mil. THIS NOTICE
WILL BE PUBLISHED MANY TIMES PLEASE DISREGARD ANY NOTICES PRIOR TO 22
OCT 87. THIS NOTICE IS IN THREE PARTS. INTRODUCTION: Wright Laboratory
(WL/AAKR) is interested in receiving proposals (technical and cost) on
the research effort described below. Technical and cost proposals in
response to this Program Research and Development Announcement (PRDA)
shall be received by 08 Dec 97, 1500 Eastern Time, addressed to the
attention of Mr. Alan Struckman, WL/AAKR, Building 7, 2530 C Street,
Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 45433-7607. This is an unrestricted PRDA.
Small businesses are encouraged to propose on this PRDA. Proposals
submitted shall be in accordance with this announcement. Proposal
receipt after the cutoff date and time specified herein shall be
treated in accordance with restrictions of FAR 52.215-10; a copy of
this provision may be obtained from the contracting point of contact.
There will be no other solicitation issued in regard to this
requirement. Offerors should be alert for any PRDA amendments that may
permit subsequent submission of proposal dates. Information
incorporated in a supplemental package is necessary for proposal
preparation. The Wright Laboratory Guide titled "PRDA and BAA Guide for
Industry," dated November 1992, also provides information specifically
designed to assist offerors in understanding the PRDA proposal
process. The "PRDA and BAA Guide for Industry" and the supplemental
package of proposal information are available through either of the
following methods: (1) Download from the Internet -- The "PRDA and BAA
Guide for Industry" is available on the Wright Laboratory R&D
Contracting Home Page (www.wl.wpafb.af.mil/contract/hp.htm) under "A
Contracting Toolbox," "PRDA/BAA Indexed Guide"). The supplemental
package is available on the same home page. If using this method to
obtain the information, please confirm receipt by providing your name,
address and telephone number via e-mail or fax to Alan Struckman,
Contract Negotiator. Fax number is (937) 255-3985. E-mail address is
struckac@aa.wpafb.af.mil. (2) You may submit a request for the packages
in writing if you are unable to access or download the information from
the home page. Written requests should be addressed to Mr. Struckman,
WL/AAKR, Bldg 7, 2530 C Street, Wright-Patterson AFB OH 45433-7607,
telephone (937) 255-2902. B -- REQUIREMENTS: (1) Technical Description:
Wright Laboratory intends to award one or more Indefinite
Delivery/Indefinite Quantity (ID/IQ) contracts to design solutions for
Automatic Target Recognition (ATR) and Sensor Fusion (SF) technology
domains for the Wright Laboratory Combat Information Technology
Division (WL/AAC) and any successor organization. This program, called
Sensor Technologies Integration Laboratory (STIL), has the objectives
to: Design, develop, improve, analyze, model, test, evaluate and
demonstrate sensor databases, development and evaluation environments,
systems, algorithms, and technologies; Apply advanced engineering and
computer technologies to improve capability, reliability,
maintainability, and affordability throughout the ATR and SF
hardware/software life-cycle. Research and development shall be
performed in the following seven topic areas: (a) Data Management Topic
Area 01: WL/AAC requires the development of innovative techniques for
data collection planning and execution, ground truthing, massive data
storage, data basing and retrieval, and data distribution to meet the
requirement for an on-site heterogeneous Automatic Target Recognition
(ATR)/Sensor Fusion (SF) database and database tools capable of
providing data to WL and other DoD programs performing ATR and SF
research. The contents of this database to consider, but not be limited
to, include: Imagery Intelligence (IMINT) and Signal Intelligence
(SIGINT) products; synthetic signatures; on and off board sensor data;
performance results; ground truth; and collateral data (i.e. DMA,
LANDSAT, models.) In order for the database to fulfill data
requirements of an ATR/SF R&D effort, a full understanding of the
multiple data types and data collecting sensors (EO, IR, hyperspectral,
multi-frequency RF) is necessary. Cost-effective and intelligent
strategies for collecting ATR and SF developer/evaluators requirements
and data, that adequately promotes ATR development, training, testing
and evaluation is of interest. Participation in data collection
planning to enhance single and multiple ATR and sensor fusion
application programs will result in increased utility of collected
data. Paramount in such planning is execution flexibility in the face
of equipment and logistical problems and delays. Collection episodes
can be single sensor or include multiple sensor phenomenologies
collected either in series or simultaneously. Such planning will
include overall, end-to-end life cycle cost for the complete data
management activity. Innovative techniques will be required to obtain
ground and image truth information, as well as screening,
characterizing, and databasing data collected from highly dynamic
(moving target), time and space varying episodes using multiple sensors
over highly disparate collection geometries and time scales. Such data
is especially difficult to correlate and associate as to content in
space and time. Understanding sensor and data phenomenology provides
the necessary knowledge to develop image metric tools for identifying
image level artifacts and anomalies, and to inform ATR developers and
evaluators of these sensor anomalies and data artifacts within the
imagery prior to algorithm developers/evaluators receiving the data.
Data characterization tools are also required to show evaluators what
data exists in the database in order to develop sequestered data sets
for independent evaluation and for assessment of the kinds of
evaluations to be performed with data. With the ability to accurately
collect ground and image truth of time/space variant and dynamic
targets, the need exists to continuously enhance the current
heterogeneous ATR and SF database to handle temporal and geo-registered
data from multiple sensors, and fused data from advanced systems.
Engineering judgment is required to determine the optimal data base
structure given the data characteristics, such as relational, object
oriented, or flat files or other structure or hybrid combinations
thereof. Knowledge of existing environments (i.e. Khoros, CORBA, C,
Matlab) is required for data tool or toolkit insertion to promote ATR
development and evaluation. In order to enhance ATR and SF Research,
design and development of intelligent techniques for data access and
distribution are required. These intelligent techniques include but are
not limited to: visually organizing large amounts of data to quickly
identify pertinent data before disseminating it; facilitating this
visualization process by utilizing the latest data visualization and
human factors research into the design; and developing intelligent
product agents to pull together related relevant data that may be
useful to the user. Intelligent product agents should include but not
be limited to: techniques for either intelligent data pulling, where
the user interactively works with the visualization and product agent
tools; and intelligent data pushing, where pertinent dataset(s) are
identified, gathered and disseminated by the database automatically up
to the data recipient's appropriate security level. In order for
intelligent push and pull technology to be successful, users must be
able to remotely access or query the WL/AAC database. Therefore,
techniques are required to disseminate data at the appropriate security
level via the World Wide Web up to the highest classified network
available, or appropriate electronic media. Additional requirements for
the data management effort are to field technical questions from data
recipients, as many users tend to be narrow experts in a related
technology and lack the insight into the data collection and generation
process that would allow them to state their requirements in a succinct
and efficient manner, provide hardcopy documentation when appropriate
and to update data and dataset description as applicable via the WWW.
(b) Laboratory Environments Topic Area 02: WL/AAC has a requirement for
an onsite world-class ATR and SF research and development laboratory
environment. The contractor shall develop a laboratory architecture
compatible with but not limited to: the Common Object Request Broker
Architecture (CORBA); the Defense Model and Simulation Office's (DMSO)
High Level Architecture (HLA); the Joint Modeling and Simulation
System (J-MASS), and Khoros. CORBA will allow network services and
applications to be viewed as objects that share common interfaces,
rather than treated as separate entities that have to be linked
directly in fixed, hard-coded relationships. Khoros is an integrated
software environment that couples strong scientific data visualization
and processing with software development tools and application
programming interfaces (APIs) to allow easy user extensibility. The
architecture shall consider information distribution, as STIL will
contain large databases that will distribute data electronically, and
information security considerations, as STIL will contain data from
unclassified public releasable, to International Traffic in Arms
Regulation (ITAR) data, to top secret/SCI requiring division-wide
sharing, contractor/government interchange, and outside world access.
These requirements will drive design issues regarding World Wide Web
encryption and design, and firewall concerns, including integration of
secure networking through the firewall, and demilitarized zones. In
addition, viewing network traffic by applications rather than
protocols, segmenting the network into zones, going with virtual LANs
where appropriate, and exploring VPDNs (virtual private data networks)
are actions to consider. Optimization of supercomputer architecture
and interconnects with workstations for a variety of computer systems
ranging from desktop workstations to state-of-the-art parallel and
multiple processor systems are of high interest. Packages such as
CORBA, X-Windows and Khoros will be available to develop software
graphical user interface tools. Connectivity is required between STIL
and: High Performance Computing (HPC) sites; the World Wide Web; the
Office of Secretary of Defense's (OSD's) Virtual Distributed Laboratory
(VDL); and classified networks (i.e. Secret Internet Protocol Routed
Network (SIPRNET), Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communication System
(JWICS)). In considering network design, the Distributed Object Model
(DOM) paradigm applies the well-established benefits of object-oriented
programming, including rapid development, reusability, and built-in
security to the enterprise. DOM allows distributed objects to interact
without knowing anything about their location. The environment
contractor shall be responsible for integrating tools,
algorithms/systems, models and databases into the STIL environment,
working with other contractors awarded under this PRDA via an associate
contractor clause. This will involve designing common wrappers or
interfaces to allow algorithms to communicate successfully with other
environment objects. Ultimate goals include the integration of the STIL
environment into other modeling and simulation environments such as the
Avionics Collaborative Engineering Environment (CEE). This might entail
a common infrastructure for distributed loosely coupled applications.
Multiple Object Request Brokers (ORBs) may be required because of the
heterogeneous nature of computing environments. Long term goals of a
real-time environment are important. (c) ATR/SF Evaluation Topic Area
03: The contractor shall perform tasks in the actual evaluation of
air-to-air and/or air-to-ground target recognition algorithms and/or
sensor fusion algorithms. The evaluation methodology should encompass
ATR/SF algorithms, single and multi-sensor data inputs, correlation and
tracking functions, real-time SF systems, and performance estimation of
ATR/SF systems. Evaluation tasks include but are not limited to:
experiment design, considering performance requirements, availability
of measured and synthetic data, and algorithm functionality; data
collection activities, including establishing data requirements,
selecting targets and backgrounds, and documenting ground and air
truth; development of performance metrics, considering program
requirements and standard community metrics and developing innovative
metrics as required; execution of tests, including accessing data from
the WL database or other sources, running algorithms on that data, and
scoring, analyzing, and reporting the results; and performance
estimation, including extrapolating results through system modeling.
Single and multi-sensor algorithms will employ data from a variety of
sensors, including synthetic aperture radar (SAR), high range
resolution radar (HRR), forward looking infrared (FLIR), electro-optic
(EO) multi-spectral, and signal intelligence. An evaluation
methodology is required which addresses the differences in
phenomenology, acquisition geometry, and sensor design while maximizing
standardization in tooldevelopment, performance metrics, and results
presentation. Multi-sensor applications will pose challenges to the
algorithm evaluator in the areas of experiment design and understanding
the impact of registration errors. An approach is required which
addresses difficulties in assembling multi-sensor data sets and
considers approaches to developing measured, synthetic, or hybrid data
sets. An approach is required to quantify the effect of reference
based and image/signal based misregistration on algorithm performance.
Test procedures will be adapted to specific targeting missions,
including adaptation of software models for weapon delivery constraints
and time lines, as well as, aircraft survivability, as required to
predict increased mission effectiveness provided by the ATR/SF systems.
(d) Target Modeling Topic Area 04: Innovative solutions in the areas of
computational electromagnetic (CEM) predictions for complex targets,
integration and application of target phenomenology and signature
exploitation technology, computer aided design (CAD) model development
and construction technologies, and validation technologies are sought.
In the area of CEM predictions for complex targets, expansion of the
current state of the art for prediction techniques involving complex
targets is desired. Innovative solutions and computer codes that employ
asymptotic methods, frequency domain methods, and time domain methods
should be investigated, as well as efficient and accurate methods of
combining low and high frequency techniques into hybrid prediction
codes demonstrating a major increase in CEM capabilities. The
contractor also should consider ways to hybridize measured data with
predicted data to form a more robust overall solution. CEM techniques
that predict radiation, as well as scattering phenomena, involving
whole targets or components should be investigated. The CEM techniques
developed in all cases should strive for rapid generation of solutions
as a function of frequency and incident and/or observation angle.
Stochastic and perturbation techniques that address the technical
challenge of augmenting static deterministic synthetic data to reflect
the dynamic nature of ATR scenarios, target configuration variation,
and target intra-class variability where appropriate should be
examined. An additional area of interest is the investigation and
demonstration of methods to synthesize scattering from ground clutter
in both rural and urban environments. The contractor should demonstrate
performance of CEM codes on multiple high performance computing (HPC)
platforms and workstations, and provide and demonstrate technologies
which stress workstation to HPC platform connectivity and
functionality. It is strongly encouraged that prediction codes be
written using an object oriented design and C++ programming language.
Target phenomenology and signature exploitation technology that can be
integrated into promising identification algorithms should be
identified. The goal of phenomenology/signature exploitation is to
develop additional robust sources of target information for use in ATR
development. CAD model construction techniques and technologies which
improve their accuracy or fidelity, increase the level of automation,
and decrease the time required to build CAD geometry models for
complex targets are sought. Efficient and accurate techniques of
sampling target geometry and materials from a variety of sources
including photographs, line drawings, blue prints, scale models and the
actual target body should be considered. These construction techniques
will be demonstrated via building multiple CAD geometry models. A
variety of CAD development software should be used to demonstrate these
advanced construction techniques including but not limited to ACAD,
BRL-CAD, and Euclid. In the validation technologies area the contractor
should investigate, develop, and demonstrate efficient, computer based,
validation methods that perform quantitative comparisons of truth data
to synthetic data. This truth data can take many forms such as radar
cross section measurements; measured antenna radiation patterns;
physical target dimensions, details, and measurements; or observed or
measured data resulting from target interrogation by active or passive
means. Synthetic data is the obvious predicted or computer generated
counterpart to truth data (e.g. radar cross section predictions or CAD
target models). The comparison metrics should allow for rapid
determination of error margins. Technology which indicates means to
reduce these error margins should also be developed and demonstrated.
The contractor should investigate, develop, and demonstrate methods to
incorporate CEM advancements, signature exploitation techniques, CAD
model geometries, and validation technologies into 1-on-1 and
few-on-few modeling and simulation (M&S) tools. These enhanced M&S
tools will be used to demonstrate the value that improved phenomenology
modeling provides to the overall simulation results. (e) Radar
Algorithm Development Topic Area 05: The objective of this thrust area
is the development of automated detection, tracking, discrimination,
classification and identification algorithms using radar sensors. The
scope includes both air and ground targets and includes both high
frequency (10 GHz and above) and low frequency (100 MHz -- 1 GHz). The
signatures of interest include wide band signatures such as high range
resolution signatures and resonance signatures, imaging signatures such
as SAR and ISAR signatures, and multi-modal signatures such as full
polarimetric, wide angle, and multi-aperture (e.g. interferometric
SAR). A key element of the algorithm development will include the use
of EM modeling to understand the phenomenology basis of the signature
characteristics, to motivate sound algorithms based on fundamental EM
principles, and to generate synthetic signatures for use, along with
measured data, in algorithm development. Both model-based and
learning-based algorithms are desired with particular interest in
hybrid algorithms that leverage the respective strengths of each basic
approach. Algorithm approaches that scale to difficult problems
(problems that have large combinatorics e.g., target type x
configuration x articulation state x obscuration x ) are of particular
interest. END OF PART 1 (0295) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0005 19971024\A-0005.SOL)
A - Research and Development Index Page
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