JUNE 26, 2024

Winners Recognized for Defense Data Grand Prix 2024

In a virtual awards ceremony, the Acquisition Innovation Research Center (AIRC) congratulated faculty from three universities that placed in the fourth iteration of the Defense Data Grand Prix (DDGP) during the spring 2024 semester.

The DDGP connects faculty-led teams (which may include students) with real-world problems posed by a Department of Defense (DoD) organization. It is sponsored by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, to support the DoD Data Strategy published in 2020 that envisions the DoD as a data-centric organization using data at the speed and scale for operational advantage and increased efficiency.

“The general purpose for the Grand Prix is to allow for tactical problems, like the ones these teams have been working on, to inform larger strategies about data processing, collection, and management,” said Dr. Stoney Trent, an AIRC researcher from Virginia Tech who helps conduct the competition.”

The first three iterations of the DDGP spanned 2022-2023. For this recent competition, AIRC collaborated with a new data sponsor, the US Navy Multi-Mission Tactical Unmanned Systems (UAS) program office (PMA-266), which offered operational problems for university teams to select and address (read the problem statements on the DDGP webpage).

Dr. Charles McElroy of Cleveland State University earned first-place honors and $45,000 for his project, “Identifying Disruptive Technologies: Leveraging Knowledge Graphs to Map the SBIR Company Ecosystem to Promote Innovation Insights.”

Second place and $33,000 went to Stevens Institute of Technology, represented by faculty lead Dr. Ying Wang and students Bing Mak and Eric Forbes, for a project titled “USMC MQ-9 Reaper Forward Deployed Sustainment: A Strategic Approach to Maintenance and Readiness Leveraging Data-Driven Insights from USAF Operations.”

The University of South Alabama received the third-place award and $22,000. Faculty lead Dr. Kari Lippert and students Bryant Baldwin and Aaron Etheridge completed a project titled “AI/ML-Enabled Test Planning and Analysis.”

“Allowing for open-ended problem solving is very important,” Trent said, citing the potential for programs like the Defense Data Grand Prix to enable academia and government to collaborate on discovering what data science can contribute to national security. “These individual submissions represent proofs-of concept that can be prototyped or scaled for broader use by the government workforce.”

Read the technical report for the first DDGP on the AIRC publications page. Follow AIRC on LinkedIn for updates on acquisition research.