More than 60 years after the first IBM computing machines showed up in the halls of NASA's Langley Research Center,
new work at Langley will use IBM tech to help researchers sort through
the huge volumes of data that is generated by aerospace research.
"There's so much data out there that consists of unstructured text that
usually only humans can make sense of, but the challenge is that
there's too much of it for any human being to read," Chris Codella, an
IBM Distinguised Engineer who is working on Watson, told Space.com. "The
idea here is to have a Watson system that can be a research development
advisor to people who work in the aerospace fields." [Forget Jeopardy: 5 Abilities That Make IBM's Watson Amazing]
Watson operates with what IBM calls cognitive computing — essentially,
it draws connections after examining huge volumes of data that is fed to
it, and it is able to return highly relevant answers within the fields
that data encompasses. The system has been used to analyze connections
within medical and scientific research documents, make potential
diagnoses, invent recipes and analyze people's personality traits
through social media posts. (Plus, of course, play Jeopardy! — after the
system drew from Wikipedia to help build its knowledge base.)
"That was the initial emphasis here: Have a system that could read it
all, make sense of it all," Codella said. "The number of documents
Watson could read is in principle unlimited."
Langley played host to a large IBM mainframe in the early 1960s, which
was used to calculate complex flight trajectories as NASA made its first
forays into human spaceflight. The upcoming new film "Hidden Figures"
features the women of Langley learning to program the great machine;
mathematician Katherine Johnson famously checked its numbers before John
Glenn launched into space, as well. (IBM has a page about the movie and
history online.)
At the time, the computer let researchers take on the many complex,
ever-changing calculations that were needed to develop rockets and plot
their paths. Now, when electronic computers have number wrangling well
covered, Watson lets them wrangle the library of research, too.
Watson researchers are also working with NASA to develop a program that
provides important information to pilots "on the fly" — during flight,
when they need to make quick decisions and don't have time to gather all
the information they might need.
"The very first demonstration system we built was meant to surface
relevant information to a pilot in flight," Codella said. NASA "tried to
recreate an incident that happened in one of the airlines a few years
ago and see if Watson could, when given the background information,
surface information that would have made a difference, had the pilot
known it at the time."
The real flight the scenario was based on landed successfully, Codella
added, but the pilot took some actions that could have made the
situation worse. During a simulated test, Watson was able to provide
information about the aircraft, equipment malfunction and weather
conditions that would have led the pilot to a better understanding of
the situation.
"It's going after that tidbit of information that might be so highly
relevant, that they might not have been aware of in their own
experience, that might make the difference in their decision process,"
Codella said. He added that the next stage of that project will begin in
2017.
IBM's early computers were housed in large rooms on Langley's campus,
but Watson operates on servers that communicate with its users
remotely, through the cloud. However, there's one situation where that
would be particularly inconvenient: in space or on another planet, where
time lag and limited bandwidth slow that stream of communication to a
trickle.
Codella described another scenario they've discussed with NASA, where a
Watson system would be able to diagnose astronauts' illnesses in flight
and offer suggestions for treatment. Perhaps the system could even help
operate the ship itself, he added. (IBM has also discussed the
possibility of Watson directing a rover on Mars.) With the continued miniaturization of computer components, called Moore's Law, the computational power it requires could someday be miniaturized enough for it to find a home in space, Codella said.
Even as the history of humans performing crucial calculations at
Langley is depicted on the big screen, in "Hidden Figures," IBM is
helping NASA to write a script for the future role of technology at the
agency — where Watson helps read and understand huge libraries of data,
reconciling contradictory information and weighing all the options
before it picks out the crucial details for a given problem.
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Wednesday, 21 December 2016
IBM's Watson Turns Its Computer Brain to NASA Research
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IBM chief technical officer Rob
High spoke at NASA's Langley Research Center in Virginia about using
the company's Watson computer system to streamline aerospace research.
Credit: NASA/David C. Bowman
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