Tracking Maneuvering Targets in a World of Netted Sensors

#Tracking #Netted #Sensors
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Technical Webinar organized by AES

With the advancement of sensor and communications systems technologies and the desire for better surveillance, the interest in sensor netting has grown significantly over the past few years.  This lecture starts by motivating the need for multisensor/multitarget tracking and then develops the fundamental concepts of single target tracking, tracking in the presence of maneuvers, multiple-model tracking, sensor resource management, multitarget tracking, and multiple sensor tracking.  Future directions of sensor netting for target tracking and the associated technical challenges is discussed. An illustrative approach with minimal use of equations is taken in this lecture in order to reach a broad audience. 



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

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  • Date: 28 Sep 2021
  • Time: 08:00 AM to 09:00 AM
  • All times are (GMT-06:00) US/Central
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  • Houston, Texas
  • United States

  • Contact Event Host
  • lorenzo.lomonte.us@ieee.org

  • Co-sponsored by IEEE AESS
  • Starts 20 September 2021 03:00 PM
  • Ends 26 September 2021 05:00 PM
  • All times are (GMT-06:00) US/Central
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dale

Biography:

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William Dale Blair is a principal research engineer with the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) and recently completed an assignment as the Technical Director for the C2BMC Knowledge Center of the Missile Defense Agency (MDA). He received the BS and MS degrees in electrical engineering from Tennessee Technological University in 1985 and 1987. In January 1998, he received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Virginia. Prior to joining GTRI, Dr. Blair was with the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren Division (NSWCDD) in Dahlgren, Virginia. At NSWCDD, he originated two benchmark problems for target tracking and radar resource allocation.  He also led a project that demonstrated through a real-time tracking experiment that modern tracking algorithms can be utilized to reduce the radar time and energy required by a phased array radar to support surveillance tracking.  Since joining GTRI in 1997, Dr. Blair has led a multiorganizational team in the development of multiplatform-multisensor-multitarget benchmarks to both air defense and ballistic missile defense.  His projects at GTRI focus mostly on the modeling and simulation and algorithm assessment associated with the sensor netting for the battle management, command, and control for the ballistic missile defense system.  

Dr. Blair is a Fellow of the IEEE and recipient of the 2001 IEEE Nathanson Award for Outstanding Young Radar Engineer. He served as the Editor for Radar Systems for IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems (T-AES) 1996-99 and Editor-In-Chief (EIC) for IEEE T-AES from 1999-2005.  Dr. Blair also served on the Board of Governors of IEEE Aerospace and Electronic Systems Society (AESS) from 1998-2003 and 2005-2010. While a member of the IEEE AESS BoG, he served as Associate Vice President for Publications for 2007-10 and Chair of the Strategic Planning Committee for 2009-10, originated the Target Tracking Systems Panel, and initiated the Systems Panel for Cyber Security Systems.  Dr. Blair's research is reported in over two hundred articles which include 38 refereed journal articles. He originated and coordinates three short courses, Target Tracking in Sensor Systems, Target Tracking Concepts, and Advanced Target Tracking for Ballistic Missile Defense, for the Professional Education Department of the Georgia Institute of Technology. Dr. Blair is coeditor and coauthor of the book, Multitarget-Multisensor Tracking: Advances and Applications III, and the coauthor of chapter 18 “Radar Measurements” and author of chapter 19 “Radar Tracking Algorithms” of the new edition of Principles of Modern Radar. He has also served as the coordinator of the ONR/GTRI Workshop on Target Tracking and Sensor Fusion for 1998 through 2011. 

Technical Areas of Interest: 
Radar Systems, Target Tracking, multiplatform-multisensor-multitarget benchmarks, ballistic missile defense system