French AI firm to process drone footage for automatic threat detection
Feb 27, 05:19 PM
A U.S. soldier launches an RQ-11B Raven
small, unmanned aircraft system during tactical training at Fort Irwin, Calif.,
Aug. 22, 2023. (Maj. Jason Elmore/US Army)
SINGAPORE — A French
firm that deploys artificial intelligence to observe Chinese and Russian
military activity says it is integrating video footage gathered by drones into
its algorithms for detecting adversaries’ military movements.
Paris-based Preligens,
founded in 2016, offers two AI-based solutions, Robin, an imagery-analysis
software, and Xerus, a computer system for military terrain mapping.
The systems work with
commercial or government-collected satellite imagery, and they can help
analysts determine whether objects of interest are civilian or military.
“It has been primarily
designed for site monitoring and has an alerting system that can be set up for
the customer for pattern-of-life analysis to cue analysts towards key signals
that can identify aircraft, vessels, vehicles, surface-to-air missiles and
more,” Coralie Trigano, the company’s senior sales executive for the
Asian-Pacific region, told Defense News at the Singapore Airshow here.
The latest improvements
made to the firm’s algorithms have included adding new detectable items as well
as additional categories of objects that the software can spot.
“We recently developed a
helicopter detector, that can now classify and identify precise models, and we
have also improved the vehicle detector, which is now capable of detecting and
categorizing civil, armored, military and electronics (radars) vehicles,”
Sophie Hue, head of communication at Preligens, wrote in an email to Defense
News.
Besides adding
full-motion video gathered by drones to the mix of data sources, developers are
also looking to implement analyses of synthetic-aperture radar images, Hue
added.
The influx of the demand
and development of drones, driven largely by the Ukraine war, has created a new era in cyber
intelligence gathering.
To demonstrate the
capabilities of their software, Preligens released its own imagery showing that
China was carrying out major military infrastructure work at one of its naval
bases in 2022.
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