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| en:safeav:as:autolevels [2025/10/20 14:05] – [Levels of Drone Autonomy] rczyba | en:safeav:as:autolevels [2026/04/07 12:05] (current) – airi | ||
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| ===== Levels of Ground Vehicle Autonomy ===== | ===== Levels of Ground Vehicle Autonomy ===== | ||
| - | There are several ways to classify autonomy levels based on various criteria. In 2014, the American organization Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) International adopted a classification of six levels of autonomous driving, which was subsequently modified in 2016. Based on a decision by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), this is the officially applicable standardization in the United States, which is also the most popular in studies on autonomous driving technologies in Europe. | + | For ground vehicles, in 2014, the American organization Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) International adopted a classification of six levels of autonomous driving, which was subsequently modified in 2016. Based on a decision by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), this is the officially applicable standardization in the United States, which is also the most popular in studies on autonomous driving technologies in Europe. |
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| + | Today, these levels have become the shorthand to communicate expectations and the object of regulatory and legal battles. | ||
| - | + | ===== Levels of Airborne | |
| - | ===== Levels of Drone Autonomy ===== | + | |
| In general, autonomy or autonomous capability is defined in the context of decision-making or self-governance within a system. According to the Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI), autonomous systems can essentially decide independently how to achieve mission objectives, without human intervention ((INSIGHT. The Journey Towards Autonomy in Civil Aerospace. Technical report. Cranfield, United Kingdom: Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI); 2020)). These systems are also capable of learning and adapting to changing operating environment conditions. However, autonomy may depend on the design, functions, and specifics of the mission or system ((Chen H, Wang XM, Li Y. A Survey of Autonomous Control for UAV. Washington, D.C., United States: IEEE Computer Society; 2009)). Autonomy can be broadly viewed as a spectrum of capabilities, | In general, autonomy or autonomous capability is defined in the context of decision-making or self-governance within a system. According to the Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI), autonomous systems can essentially decide independently how to achieve mission objectives, without human intervention ((INSIGHT. The Journey Towards Autonomy in Civil Aerospace. Technical report. Cranfield, United Kingdom: Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI); 2020)). These systems are also capable of learning and adapting to changing operating environment conditions. However, autonomy may depend on the design, functions, and specifics of the mission or system ((Chen H, Wang XM, Li Y. A Survey of Autonomous Control for UAV. Washington, D.C., United States: IEEE Computer Society; 2009)). Autonomy can be broadly viewed as a spectrum of capabilities, | ||
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| + | ===== Marine autonomy (IMO MASS levels) and Space autonomy (NASA ALFUS framework) ===== | ||
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| + | For marine systems, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) defines autonomy through its Maritime Autonomous Surface Ship (MASS) framework, which describes four progressive levels of autonomy based on the degree of human involvement and onboard decision-making capability. At lower levels, ships use automation primarily to assist human crews with navigation, propulsion, and safety monitoring, while humans remain onboard and responsible for operational decisions. Intermediate levels allow remote operation, where ships may operate without onboard crew but are supervised and controlled from shore-based control centers. At the highest level, fully autonomous vessels can perceive their environment, | ||
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| + | In space systems, autonomy is commonly described using NASA’s Autonomy Levels for Unmanned Systems (ALFUS) framework, which evaluates autonomy based on the system’s independence from human control, its ability to handle environmental complexity, and its capacity to accomplish mission objectives without intervention. At lower levels, spacecraft rely heavily on ground operators for command and control, executing predefined instructions with minimal onboard decision-making. As autonomy increases, spacecraft gain the ability to perform functions such as fault detection and recovery, autonomous navigation, and adaptive mission planning. At the highest levels, systems can independently perceive their environment, | ||
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| + | **Why marine and space autonomy frameworks differ from ground autonomy:** | ||
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| + | Marine and space autonomy frameworks differ fundamentally from ground autonomy because their operational constraints emphasize endurance, remote operation, and system resilience rather than continuous interaction with humans in dense, unpredictable environments. Ground vehicles must operate safely in close proximity to human drivers, pedestrians, | ||
| + | ^ Unified Level ^ Ground (SAE J3016) ^ Airborne (NASA / UAV / DoD) ^ Marine (IMO MASS / DNV) ^ Space (NASA ALFUS) ^ Description ^ | ||
| + | | Level 0 | Level 0 – No automation | Manual flight | AL 0 – Manual ship | ALFUS 0 – Manual | Human performs all sensing, planning, and control | | ||
| + | | Level 1 | Level 1 – Driver assistance | Basic autopilot (e.g., altitude hold, heading hold) | MASS 1 – Decision support | ALFUS 1 – Teleoperation assist | Automation assists human but does not replace decision-making | | ||
| + | | Level 2 | Level 2 – Partial automation | Automated flight execution with supervision | MASS 2 – Remotely controlled with crew onboard | ALFUS 2 – Automated execution | System performs control functions but human supervises continuously | | ||
| + | | Level 3 | Level 3 – Conditional automation | Supervisory autonomy | MASS 3 – Remotely controlled without crew | ALFUS 3 – Supervisory autonomy | System performs mission tasks but human intervenes when needed | | ||
| + | | Level 4 | Level 4 – High automation | High autonomy UAV | MASS 4 – Fully autonomous ship | ALFUS 4–5 – High autonomy spacecraft | System operates independently in defined environments | | ||
| + | | Level 5 | Level 5 – Full automation | Fully autonomous UAV | Fully autonomous ship (advanced DNV AL 4+) | ALFUS 6 – Full autonomy | System operates independently in all environments | | ||
| + | The classification of autonomy into structured levels is not merely a technical taxonomy; it serves as a foundational construct for legal responsibility, | ||