Since 2019, the Brookings Institution and the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University (Tsinghua CISS) have convened teams of national security technology experts from the United States and China for an unofficial Track-II dialogue on artificial intelligence (AI) in national security. The two teams identified a need to build parallel glossaries of AI terms--one developed by U.S. experts and the other developed by Chinese experts--to enable a precise understanding of each other's intended meanings when discussing AI and national security.
Related Organizations
- Acknowledgements and disclosures
- The U.S. experts involved in the Brookings-Tsinghua CISS dialogue; Ryan McElveen for coordination; Derek Belle, Adam Lammon, and Allie Matthias for editorial support; and Rachel Slattery for web design.
- Pages
- 9
- Published in
- United States of America
Table of Contents
- Weapons armament ammunition equipment devices 1
- Weapons systems 1
- LethalNon-lethal weapons 2
- Robots 2
- Intelligent weapons 2
- Autonomous weapons systems 2
- Intelligent clusterswarm systems 2
- Unmanned systems 2
- Unmanned combat platform 3
- Unmanned aerial platforms drones unmanned aerial vehicles UAV remotely piloted aircraft systems RPAS 3
- Unmanned ground platforms self-driving vehicles unmanned vehicles 3
- Unmanned surface platforms unmanned surface vessels 3
- Unmanned underwater vehicle 3
- Artificial intelligence 3
- Machine learning 4
- Deep learning 4
- Neural networks 4
- Autonomous control semi-autonomous fully autonomous 4
- AI lifecycle 4
- Chain of command 5
- Command and Control System 5
- Decision point 5
- Meaningful human control 5
- Human-machine interaction 6
- Trustworthy AI mutual understanding mutual compliance mutual trust 6
- Chain of Decision target identification target confirmation action authorization decision confirmation task termination task reset 6
- Acknowledgements and disclosures 7
- Footnotes 7