{"id":1346,"date":"2024-06-16T00:42:51","date_gmt":"2024-06-16T00:42:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/daily-bullet.com\/?p=1346"},"modified":"2024-06-16T00:42:51","modified_gmt":"2024-06-16T00:42:51","slug":"developers-warfighters-come-together-at-dtra-demonstration","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/daily-bullet.com\/?p=1346","title":{"rendered":"Developers, Warfighters Come Together at DTRA Demonstration"},"content":{"rendered":"
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. \u2014 Every year since 2018, the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Chemical Biological Center \u2014 DEVCOM CBC \u2014 has helped the Defense Threat Reduction Agency plan and execute an in-the-field user assessment of chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear technology called Chemical and Biological Operational Analysis. This year, CBOA was held at Camp LeJeune, North Carolina from April 13 to 18, and DEVCOM CBC was in the thick of it.<\/p>\n
CBOA is funded under the Chem-Bio Defense Program and executed by the Joint Science and Technology Office of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, or DTRA. It brings technology developers from government agencies, industry and academia together with warfighters in order to put new technologies into warfighters\u2019 hands. Warfighter feedback provides vital input to technology developers, enabling them to make improvements and correct shortfalls.<\/p>\n
At Camp LeJeune, warfighters put these protypes through their paces in realistic field scenarios in which warfighters used them to interrogate mock unknown CBRN weapons caches. After running through each scenario, the warfighters gave the technology developers very specific feedback on what worked, what did not and how they could be improved.<\/p>\n That feedback is often simple but important, such as, \u201cThe labeling of the buttons on the chemical agent detection device is confusing.\u201d It can also lead to new innovations, such as, \u201cCan I mount the device on my helmet so that my hands are free?\u201d Feedback can also include how warfighters are taught to use the new equipment, such as \u201cMost of the people in my unit are visual learners, can you make a video version of the user\u2019s manual?\u201d<\/p>\n Clare Hamilton, a DEVCOM CBC program analyst, has supported CBOA since its inception. This year, she managed the Concept Tent during the CBOA event where technologies under development but not mature enough to use in the scenarios were displayed. Starting last October, she helped evaluate all the candidate technologies submitted by the technology developers and coordinated their participation in the Concept Tent. Of the 19 technologies displayed on tabletops in the tent this year, five were developed by DEVCOM CBC.<\/p>\n
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