Defense Data Combine

A Defense Data Grand Prix Event

Contact a program manager by August 15 to participate in the Fall 2025 semester.

The Defense Data Grand Prix (DDGP) is an annual collegiate challenge, organized by AIRC and sponsored by Department of Defense entities, where faculty-led teams and students devise data-driven solutions for real operational problems of national security.

The Defense Data Combine (DDC) is a new, non-competitive category of data problems for faculty-led teams to solve.

DoD Sponsorship Opportunities

AIRC is seeking DoD entities to sponsor DDC teams for the Fall 2025 semester by presenting operational problems involving acquisition or sustainment questions.

Cost: $30k per problem

Provide data: unclassified or CUI

Collaborate with faculty team: ~1 hour/week virtual meeting

Benefit from innovative academic research:

Implement findings/recommendations

Improve your operations

Identify submissions for follow-on work (further research or prototype)

Interest talent in defense careers

POINT OF CONTACT
Dr. Stoney Trent
Virginia Tech; Colonel, US Army (Retired)

Faculty Opportunities

Faculty-led teams selected to participate in the DDC for the Fall 2025 semester will be connected with DoD entities to solve real-life data problems.

Funding provided: $30k per problem

Data sources provided: unclassified or CUI

Collaborate with DoD sponsors: ~1 hour/week virtual meeting

Provide meaningful research results for national security

The DDC is open to all accredited universities in the United States.

POINT OF CONTACT
Dr. Hoong Yan See Tao
Stevens Institute of Technology

Sample Data Problem

In a previous Defense Data Grand Prix, a team from Stevens Institute of Technology studied a problem labeled “USMC Aviation Flight Maintenance and Readiness Analysis.”

Objective

Improve aircraft readiness and mission capability (ready-to-fly aircraft) for USMC through quantifiable prediction of flight and maintenance hours.

Idea

Focus on the statistical analysis and prediction attributes of maintenance and flight hours based on the USMC internal database.

Results

Demonstrated how data could more accurately characterize maintenance operations than traditional intuitive approaches, and how readiness data can provide feedback on acquisition decisions such as manning, equipment use profiles, and spare parts.

Click the image to read the technical report.

Previous DDGP Sponsors

  Defense Logistics Agency
  United States Marine Corps Aviation
  NAVAIR Program Office for Multi-Mission Tactical Unmanned Aerial Systems (PMA-266)