Military Review English Edition May-June 2014 | Page 17

ROBOTIC WARFARE U.S. Army Sgt. Benjamin D. Parker, an explosive ordnance disposal team leader, and Spc. Chase Donnelly, a robotics operator, prepare their robot to inspect a suspected improvised explosive device in eastern Afghanistan’s Nangarhar Province. (U.S. Army, Sgt. Tracy J. Smith) 2011 update of the Roadmap, “an autonomous system is able to make a decision based on a set of rules and/or limitations. It is able to determine what information is important in making a decision.”10 By contrast, the DOD argues, automatic systems are fully preprogrammed. They can “act repeatedly and independently of external influence or control,” but they “follow a predefined path,” and their behavior has to be fully specified in advance.11 Machine autonomy, from this perspective, refers to robotic systems that would somehow be more flexible and unpredictable, compared to automated systems, in deciding how to operate— given predefined goals, rules, or norms. Those that make this distinction about autonomy tend to point to artificial intelligence technologies—such as machine learning or probabilistic reasoning methods—as technologies that would enable these kinds of robotic systems.12 Robots equipped with these kinds of technologies would be able to learn from experience and adapt to changing MILITARY REVIEW May-June 2014 circumstances as well as deal with uncertain or missing data. Such descriptions of autonomy seem to suggest that human operators as well as developers would have less control over the behavior of the system. The machine would not only operate independently of the human operator, but also, to a certain extent, independently of its human creators. Nevertheless, even here, autonomy does not mean that machines are free in the decisions they make; the conditions for making a decision are carefully set by humans. As the DOD’s 2011 conception of autonomy shows, laws and strategies provided by humans will still govern the behavior of autonomous systems. The envisioned systems could vary their behavior as long as they stayed within these predefined constraints. Note that this would be a remarkable feat, as it would mean these robots could interpret laws and strategies, applying them appropriately in ever-changing sociotechnical contexts. Regardless of whether this is possible, devel15