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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
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1


Introduction

This introductory chapter describes the biennial assessment process conducted by the National Research Council’s (NRC’s) Army Research Laboratory Technical Assessment Board (ARLTAB). It then describes the preparation and organization of the report, the assessment criteria, and the approach taken during the report preparation.

THE BIENNIAL ASSESSMENT PROCESS

The ARLTAB is guided by the following statement of task:

An ad hoc committee to be named the Army Research Laboratory Technical Assessment Board (ARLTAB), to be overseen by the Laboratory Assessments Board, will be appointed to continue the function of providing biennial assessments of the scientific and technical quality of the Army Research Laboratory (ARL). These assessments will include findings and recommendations related to the quality of ARL’s research, development, and analysis programs. While the primary role of the ARLTAB is to provide peer assessment, it may offer advice on related matters when so requested by the ARL Director. The ARLTAB will provide an interim assessment report at the end of Year 1 of the assessment cycle and a final assessment report biennially. The ARLTAB will be assisted by five separately appointed panels that will focus on particular portions of the ARL program.

The charge of ARLTAB is to provide biennial assessments of the scientific and technical quality of the Army Research Laboratory (ARL). These assessments include the development of findings and recommendations related to the quality of ARL’s research, development, and analysis programs. ARLTAB is charged to review the work in ARL’s five core technical competencies (ballistics sciences, human

Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
×

sciences, information sciences, materials sciences, and mechanical sciences)1 but not the work of the Army Research Office (ARO), a key element of the ARL organization that manages and supports basic research; however, all ARLTAB panels receive reports of how the research and development activities of ARO and ARL are coordinated.

In addition, at the discretion of the ARL director, ARLTAB reviews selected portions of the work conducted by the Collaborative Technology Alliances (CTAs) and Cooperative Research Alliances (CRAs). Although ARLTAB’s primary role is to provide peer assessment, it also may offer advice on related matters when requested to do so by the ARL director; such advice focuses on technical rather than programmatic considerations. To conduct its assessments, ARLTAB is assisted by five NRC panels, each of which focuses on one of the core technical competencies of the ARL enterprise. The ARLTAB assessments are commissioned by ARL itself rather than by one of its parent organizations.

For this assessment, the ARLTAB consisted of six leading scientists and engineers whose collective experience spans the major topics within ARL’s scope. Five panels, one for each of ARL’s core technical competencies, report to the ARLTAB. Five of the ARLTAB members serve as chairs of these panels. The panels range in size from 13 to 29 members, whose expertise is carefully matched to the technical fields covered by the areas that they review. Selected members of each panel attend each annual review. In total, 100 experts participated in the process that led to this report. All panel and ARLTAB members participate without compensation.

The NRC appointed the ARLTAB and panel members with an eye to assembling a slate of experts without conflicts of interest and with balanced perspectives. The experts include current and former executives and research staff from industrial research and development (R&D) laboratories, leading academic researchers, and staff from the Department of Energy national laboratories and federally funded R&D centers. Twenty-eight of them are members of the National Academy of Engineering, and five are members of the National Academy of Sciences. A number have been leaders in relevant professional societies, and several are past members of organizations such as the Army Science Board and the Defense Science Board. ARLTAB and its panels are supported by NRC staff, who interact with ARL on a continuing basis to ensure that ARLTAB and the panels receive the information they need to carry out their assessments. ARLTAB and panel members serve for finite terms, generally 4 to 6 years, so that viewpoints are regularly refreshed and the expertise of the ARLTAB and panel members continues to match the ARL’s activities. Biographical information on the ARLTAB members appears in Appendix B.

In 2013 and 2014, the five panels reviewed the following ARL core technical competencies:

  • Panel on Ballistics Science and Engineering: protection, lethality, energetics, and survivability/lethality/vulnerability analysis;
  • Panel on Human Factors Science: translational neuroscience, soldier simulation and training technology, soldier performance (perceptual sciences and physical–cognitive interaction), and human-systems integration;
  • Panel on Information Science: autonomous systems, network sciences, atmospheric sciences, and computational sciences;
  • Panel on Materials Science and Engineering: power, energy, photonics, biological sciences, electronic materials and devices, and structural materials; and
  • Panel on Mechanical Science and Engineering: propulsion, mechanics, and diagnostics.

_______________

1 For 2015-2016, the ARLTAB is charged to review the work in ARL’s seven science and technology campaigns; namely, Materials Research, Computational Sciences, Information Sciences, Human Sciences, Sciences for Maneuver, Sciences for Lethality and Protection, and Assessment and Analysis.

Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
×

This biennial report summarizes the findings of the ARLTAB from the reviews conducted by the panels in 2013 and 2014 and subsumes the 2013 interim report.2

PREPARATION AND ORGANIZATION OF THIS REPORT

The current report is the eighth biennial report of ARLTAB. Its first biennial report was issued in 2000; annual reviews were issued in 1996, 1997, 1998, and 2013. As with the earlier reviews, this report contains the ARLTAB’s judgments about the quality of ARL’s work (Chapters 2 through 6 focus on the individual core technical competencies, and Chapter 7 provides a discussion of crosscutting issues across all of ARL). The rest of this chapter explains the rich set of interactions that supports those judgments.

The amount of information that is funneled to the ARLTAB, including the evaluations by the recognized experts who make up the ARLTAB’s panels, provides a solid foundation for a thorough peer review. This review is based on a large amount of information received from ARL and on interactions between ARL staff and the ARLTAB and its panels. Most of the information exchange occurs during the annual meetings convened by the respective panels at the appropriate ARL sites. Both at scheduled meetings and in less formal interactions, ARL evinces a very healthy level of information exchange and acceptance of external comments. The assessment panels and ARLTAB engaged in many constructive interactions with ARL staff during their annual site visits in 2013 and 2014. In addition, useful collegial exchanges took place between panel members and individual ARL investigators outside of scheduled meetings as ARL staff members sought additional clarification about panel comments or questions and drew on panel members’ contacts and sources of information.

Each panel’s review meeting lasted about 2.5 days, during which time the panel members received a combination of overview briefings by ARL management and technical briefings by ARL staff. Prior to the meetings, panels received extensive materials for review, including selected staff publications.

The overview briefings brought the panels up to date on the broad scope of ARL’s scientific and technical work. This context-building step is needed because the panels are purposely composed of people who—while experts in the technical fields covered by ARL’s core technical competencies that they review—are not engaged in collaborative work with ARL. Technical briefings for the panels focused on the R&D goals, strategies, methodologies, and results of selected projects at the laboratory. Briefings are targeted toward coverage of a representative sample of each core technical competency area over the 2-year assessment cycle. Briefings include poster sessions and laboratory tours that allow direct interaction among the panelists and staff of projects that were not covered in the briefings.

Ample time during both overview and technical briefings was devoted to discussion, which enabled panel members to pose questions and ARL staff to provide additional technical and contextual information to clarify panel members’ understanding. The panels also devoted sufficient time to closed-session deliberations, during which they developed findings and identified important questions or gaps in panel understanding. Those questions or gaps were discussed during follow-up sessions with ARL staff so that the panel was confident of the accuracy and completeness of its assessments. Panel members continued to refine their findings, conclusions, and recommendations during written exchanges and teleconferences among themselves after the meetings.

In addition to the insights that they gained from the panel meetings, ARLTAB members received exposure to ARL and its staff at ARLTAB meetings each winter. The 2013 and 2014 ARLTAB meetings

_______________

2 National Research Council, 2014, 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory: Interim Report, Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press.

Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
×

refined elements of the assessment process focused on ARL’s core technical competencies, including read-ahead materials, review agendas, and expertise required within the panels.

ASSESSMENT CRITERIA

During the assessment, the ARLTAB and its panels considered the following questions posed by the ARL director:

  • Is the scientific quality of the research of comparable technical quality to that executed in leading federal, university, and industrial laboratories both nationally and internationally?
  • Does the research program reflect a broad understanding of the underlying science and research conducted elsewhere?
  • Does the research employ the appropriate laboratory equipment and/or numerical models?
  • Are the qualifications of the research team compatible with the research challenge?
  • Are the facilities and laboratory equipment state of the art?
  • Are programs crafted to employ the appropriate mix of theory, computation, and experimentation?

To assist ARL in addressing promising technical approaches, the ARLTAB also considered the following questions:

  • Are there especially promising projects that, with improved direction or resources, could produce outstanding results that could ultimately be transitioned to the field?
  • Are there promising outside-the-box concepts that could be pursued but are not currently in the ARL portfolio?

Within the general framework described above, the ARLTAB also developed and the panels selectively applied detailed assessment criteria organized in the following four categories (Appendix C presents the complete set of assessment criteria):

  1. Effectiveness of interaction with the scientific and technical community. Criteria in this category relate to cognizance of and contributions to the scientific and technical community whose activities are relevant to the work performed at ARL;
  2. Formulation of projects’ goals and plans. Criteria in this category relate to the extent to which projects address ARL strategic technical goals and are planned to effectively achieve the stated objectives;
  3. R&D methodology. Criteria in this category address the appropriateness of the hypotheses that drive the research, of the tools and methods applied to the collection and analysis of data, and of the judgments about future directions of the research; and
  4. Capabilities and resources. Criteria in this category relate to whether current and projected equipment, facilities, and human resources are appropriate to achieve success of the projects.

APPROACH TAKEN DURING REPORT PREPARATION

This report represents the ARLTAB’s consensus findings and recommendations, developed through deliberations that included consideration of the notes prepared by the panel members summarizing their assessments. The ARLTAB’s aim with this report is to provide guidance to the ARL director that will

Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
×

help ARL sustain its process of continuous improvement. To that end, ARLTAB examined its extensive and detailed notes from the many ARLTAB panel and individual interactions with ARL during the 2013-2014 period. From those notes it distilled a shorter list of the main trends, opportunities, and challenges that merit attention at the level of the ARL director and his management team. The ARLTAB used that list as the basis for this report. Specific ARL projects are used to illustrate these points in the following chapters when it is helpful to do so, but the ARLTAB did not aim to present the director with a detailed account of interactions with bench scientists. The draft of this report was subsequently honed and reviewed according to NRC procedures before being released.

The ARLTAB applied a largely qualitative rather than quantitative approach to the assessment. The approach of ARLTAB and its panels relied on the experience, technical knowledge, and expertise of its members, whose backgrounds were carefully matched to the core technical competency areas in which the ARL activities are conducted. The ARLTAB and its panels reviewed selected examples of the scientific and technological research performed by ARL; it was not possible to review all ARL programs and projects exhaustively. Given the necessarily nonexhaustive nature of the review process, the failure to mention a particular program or project should not be interpreted as a negative reflection on the omitted program or project.

The ARLTAB’s goal was to identify and report salient examples of accomplishments and opportunities for further improvement with respect to the technical merit of the ARL work and specific elements of ARL’s resource infrastructure that are intended to support the technical work. Collectively, these highlighted examples for each ARL core technical competency area are intended to portray an overall impression of the laboratory while preserving useful mention of suggestions specific to projects and programs that the ARLTAB considered to be of special note within the set of those examined.

REPORT CONTENT

Part I of the report discusses the biennial assessment process used by ARLTAB and its five panels. Part II: Chapters 2 through 6 provide detailed assessments of each of the ARL core technical competency areas reviewed during the 2013-2014 period. Part III presents findings and recommendations common across multiple competency areas. The appendixes provide the ARL organizational chart and its mapping to the core competency areas reviewed in 2013 and 2014, biographical information on the ARLTAB members and staff, the assessment criteria used by ARLTAB and its panels, and a list of acronyms found in the report.

Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
×
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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
×
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Suggested Citation:"1 Introduction." National Research Council. 2015. 2013-2014 Assessment of the Army Research Laboratory. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/21675.
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The National Research Council's Army Research Laboratory Technical Assessment Board (ARLTAB) provides biennial assessments of the scientific and technical quality of the research, development, and analysis programs at the Army Research Laboratory, focusing on ballistics sciences, human sciences, information sciences, materials sciences, and mechanical sciences.

This report discusses the biennial assessment process used by ARLTAB and its five panels; provides detailed assessments of each of the ARL core technical competency areas reviewed during the 2013-2014 period; and presents findings and recommendations common across multiple competency areas.

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