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Home>Centre for Assuring Autonomy>Impact>Rachel Horne TASDCRC case study

Rachel Horne is the Assurance of Autonomy Activity Lead at Trusted Autonomous Systems (TAS) - Australia’s first Defence Cooperative Research Centre.

TAS delivers research into world-leading autonomous and robotic technologies to enable trusted and effective cooperation between humans and machines. They run two ‘common good activities’ to progress the ethical, legal, and regulatory infrastructure for autonomous systems - Ethics and Law of Autonomous Systems and Assurance of Autonomy.

Contact us

Assuring Autonomy International Programme

assuring-autonomy@york.ac.uk
+44 (0)1904 325345
Institute for Safe Autonomy, University of York, Deramore Lane, York YO10 5GH

We're trying to work out why it is hard to use autonomous technology in the maritime, air and land domains, and then doing projects that are impactful to try and alleviate some of those hurdles.

Why collaborate?

The collaboration with the York team came about through TAS’s previous CEO, Professor Jason Scholz, who encouraged the collaboration that Rachel then set up. AAIP is one of the primary international collaborators for TAS’s Assurance of Autonomy activity.

The AAIP team at York are doing world leading research and are at the forefront of the field that they're working in, and that we're also seeking to work in. We don't have any projects specifically looking at how to actually do assurance. For example, what should those assurance methodologies look like? And certainly not to the level of detail that the
AAIP have produced. For us, it's a no brainer to collaborate with such an organisation, especially one that's also funded for the public good.

Sharing expertise

The AAIP team delivered a series of three public webinars talking through the AMLAS guidance, and the ethics of assuring AI. Rachel also visited the AAIP at the Institute for Safe Autonomy in 2022.

The idea was to draw on the expertise of the AAIP team, and especially John McDermid, and find topics that were of interest to our TAS stakeholders. It was simultaneously more exposure for the AAIP team but also a really good way of giving our stakeholders access to world leading expertise.

Future collaboration

Rachel emphasises that it would be good to collaborate further. She identified how the AAIP’s technical guidance does not duplicate the more general guidance produced by TAS.

Much of TAS’s work is about the application of technology (‘test and evaluate’ programmes) and the accelerated use of academic outputs; a trajectory which may offer clues for the next phase of the AAIP. Another area of potential collaboration is upskilling, specifically short courses to equip operators with the capability and understanding they need to use the technology in a safe and trusted way.

Contact us

Assuring Autonomy International Programme

assuring-autonomy@york.ac.uk
+44 (0)1904 325345
Institute for Safe Autonomy, University of York, Deramore Lane, York YO10 5GH