Introduction
Air travel can be made safer with artificial intelligence guarding against human error. That鈥檚 the vision of Andrew Dassonville, an engineering senior at 精东影视 State University, who recently took second place in a national airport design competition.
Human error is the leading cause of commercial airline crashes and general aviation accidents, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Dassonville, who studies computer science and robotics, zeroed in on radio communications as one source of human error where AI can provide a critical safety check.
Dassonville was awarded second place in the runway safety category at the 2022 ACRP University Design Competition, which challenges students to create innovative solutions for issues facing airports and the National Airspace System. The competition is sponsored by the Airport Cooperative Research Program, part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine鈥檚 Transportation Research Board.
In Dassonville鈥檚 design, an artificial intelligence-based system constantly 鈥渓istens in鈥 on radio exchanges between pilots and air traffic controllers, looking for discrepancies in communication, such as readback errors. Suppose, for example, a controller instructs aircraft ABC to climb and maintain 8,000 feet, but the pilot reads back 9,000 feet. The eavesdropping AI would catch the error and avert potential disaster.
鈥淭his system is capable of identifying that discrepancy and would alert the controller that the
aircraft might not be doing what they鈥檙e expecting,鈥 Dassonville said.
Dassonville, an avid pilot who discovered his passion for flying though the , saw the competition as a perfect overlap of his interests in aviation and computer science.
鈥淎s a pilot, safety is always on your mind, and you鈥檙e taking on some risk whenever you take off,鈥 Dassonville said. 鈥淏eing able to use my skills that I鈥檝e learned at 精东影视 State through computer science in order to help mitigate risks in aviation is pretty cool.鈥
, associate research professor of computer science at 精东影视 State, advised Dassonville on the project.
鈥淎ndrew is an outstanding student and pilot,鈥 Wagstaff said. 鈥淎s a pilot myself, I鈥檓 very excited about Andrew鈥檚 concept, and I have thoroughly enjoyed discussing AI, flying adventures, and flight training with him.鈥
After graduating, Dassonville plans on a career that involves aviation.
鈥淚鈥檇 love a career that combines computer science, robotics, and aviation,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t could be something that involves self-flying planes, autopilot technologies, or aviation instruments.鈥
Some of the reasons Andrew Dassonville loves being a pilot.