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The United States Army Simulation and Training Technology Center (STTC) [1] provides the United States Department of Defense and United States Department of Homeland Security, with applied research to develop simulation technologies, build on current simulation knowledge, and understand system of systems environments where human, agent, and teams are involved.
Military Open Simulator Enterprise Strategy (MOSES) is a U.S. Army project evaluating the ability of OpenSimulator to provide independent and secured access to a virtual world. [ 1 ] MOSES is a research project of the United States Army Simulation and Training Technology Center (STTC) , led by Science and Technology Manager Dr. Douglas Maxwell.
The Institute for Creative Technologies (ICT) is a University Affiliated Research Center at the University of Southern California located in Playa Vista, California. ICT was established in 1999 with funding from the US Army. [1] The Institute's facilities as of April 2021
NCS is located in the Central Florida Research Park, adjacent to Naval Support Activity Orlando, and the simulation headquarters of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and the Joint Program Office for Medical Simulation, Army Futures Command Synthetic Training Environment (STE) and an Army Contracting Command Office in Orlando, Florida, USA.
United States Army Combat Capabilities Development Command; United States Army Command, Control, Communication, Computers, Cyber, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Center; United States Army Materiel Systems Analysis Activity; United States Army Research Laboratory; United States Army Simulation and Training Technology Center
CACI Awarded $31 Million Contract to Provide Training and Simulation Support to U.S. Army Reserve ARLINGTON, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- CACI International Inc (NYSE:CACI) announced today that it has ...
Mounted Warfare TestBed (MWTB) at Fort Knox, Kentucky, was the premier site for distributed simulation experiments in the US Army for over 20 years. It used simulation systems, including fully manned virtual simulators and computer-generated forces, to perform experiments that examined current and future weapon systems, concepts, and tactics.
The National Research Council's Committee on Modeling, Simulation, and Games, conducted a study whose purpose was to provide a technical assessment of Modeling, Simulation, and Games (MS&G) research and development worldwide and to identify future applications of this technology and its potential impacts on government and society.