DASA/Dstl

Hadean has been awarded competitive funding by the Defence and Security Accelerator (DASA), in the form of a Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) contract, to research and develop a representative pattern of life simulation at scale and populate the empty digital worlds of military training.

The project uses AI to create a realistic simulation of A3E (Audiences, Actors, Adversaries, and Enemies). The system features end-to-end AI interfacing.  

It is consistent and configurable, dynamically responding to events and actions during the training exercise. It also provides in-depth after-action analysis. The project is funded by the British Army in support of the Army Collective Training System (ACTS) and represents Hadean’s continued direct-to-government engagement in support of the programme.

Enhancing situational awareness and decision-making in multi-domain exercises

Utilizing generative AI to scale populations and create realistic training scenarios

Integrating LLM-generated social media feeds for improved training outcomes

Enhancing situational awareness and decision-making in multi-domain exercises

Utilizing generative AI to scale populations and create realistic training scenarios

Integrating LLM-generated social media feeds for improved training outcomes

Hadean's Role

Hadean’s AI-powered spatial computing provides a scalable Pattern of Life simulation for dynamic human terrains, integrating with large-scale SSEs and LVC training for enhanced multi-domain exercises, situational awareness, and decision support.
01.

Dynamic A3E Entities Simulation

Adapting to cues, stressors, and frictions across human and information domains.

02.

Scalable Simulated Populations

Adjusting the number of civilians in simulations to meet diverse training needs

03.

Real-Time Social Media Sentiment Tracking

LLM-generated social media feeds to reflect population sentiment, tracking civilian responses to events in real-time

04.

Immediate After-Action AI Analysis

AI analysis of events for immediate after-action insights