Australian Army chooses AI-infused platform to transcribe combat net radio

Automated communications transcription and analysis to enhance situational awareness.

The Australian Army and Microsoft are proud to announce they are collaborating on a program that explores how modern digital technologies could transform command and control in the future. The initial focus is on using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to transcribe and analyse voice communications over combat net radio.

The Command, Control, Communications Process Optimisation initiative aims to bring clarity to what can be a chaotic operational environment – with reports and searchable transcripts providing commanders with improved situational awareness.

Automating battlespace communications transcription will also free personnel for more human centric tasks.

The resulting insights will help optimise operational decision making and create important and intelligent digital foundations for the transformation of AI-enabled decision making over next decade. This is highlighted in the Army’s Robotic and Autonomous Systems Strategy (RAS Strategy) under the Improving Decision Making banner.

The team, comprising of Microsoft system analysts, data scientists and data architects along with the Army’s Robotic & Autonomous Systems Implementation & Coordination Office (RICO) personnel from the Future Land Warfare Branch, is presently prototyping a solution to transcribe combat radio communications to text, identify key message parameters such as the sender and recipient and to extract meaning from the transcription.

Artificial intelligence will be used to interpret and to search communications in order to infer insights about the battle with an end-user presentation layer through Power BI.

Brigadier Ian Langford, Director General of the Future Land Warfare Branch said;Collaborative and innovative methods to achieve this accelerate the rate of adoption of cutting-edge technology to afford an Army in Motion an edge in the future.”

The prototype solution deploys Azure cognitive services to support transcription and natural language processing. Due to the nuances of radio telephony communications, significant customisation has been required to ingest, clean and filter audio signals. The prototype has been built in the Army Land Network Integration Centre (LNIC) Azure environment and is the first example of this platform being used in a collaboration with industry. Designing, testing and validation has been performed with HQ 3 Brigade as the ‘end user’ for the program.

Mark Leigh, General Manager, Public Sector, Microsoft ANZ said; ”Microsoft and the Australian Army are both committed to the ethical and responsible use of AI, and this remains central to our collaboration.

“We are proud to be working with the Australian Army on this important project, bringing the very best minds and technology together to support and keep safe the men and women of Australia who work tirelessly on our behalf.”

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