Non-Lethal Weapons Effectiveness Assessment Development and Verification Study (Etude d'evaluation, de developpement et de verification de l'efficacite des armes non letales)
Abstract
Whether you're in the operating forces making decisions about weapon selection and employment, a planner addressing capability requirements, a modeller analyzing systems or tactics, a system developer working on new weapons, or an acquisition official making program funding decisions, being able to assess weapon effectiveness is of great importance. As a result of SAS-060, there is now a developed and tested methodology for assessing NLW effectiveness. SAS-060 received the 2008 NATO Scientific Achievement Award for its path breaking contributions. This study and its predecessor (SAS-035) developed an understanding of non-lethal effects, target responses (physical, physiological, and psychological), and effectiveness (comparing actual responses to required responses within an operational context). The methodology explicitly addresses two components of task requirements: 1) Task accomplishment (what must be done to the target); and 2) Constraint satisfaction (what must not be done, with respect to the target or to others (own force, non-combatants, infrastructure, etc.)). The methodology applies graphical comparison techniques to quantify the degree to which a NLW addresses task accomplishment and constraint satisfaction. And, it does so with respect to seven target factors: mobility, communications, physical function, ability to sense and interpret, group cohesion, motivation, and identification.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 2009
- Accession Number
- ADA511388
Entities
Organizations
- NATO Science and Technology Organization