search

UMD     This Site






Science magazine is featuring the research of ISR-affiliated Professor V.S. Subrahmanian (CS/UMIACS) in a story that details how the U.S. military has tried to integrate cultural, behavioral, and economic aspects of an adversary into its battle plans.

Subrahmanian and his colleagues have developed software tools to extract specific information about violent incidents from various news sources. They then use that information to tease out rules about the enemy's behavior.

For example, an analysis of strikes carried out by Hezbollah, the terrorist group in Lebanon, showed that the group was much more likely to carry out suicide bombings during times when it was not actively engaged in education and propaganda. The insight could potentially help security forces predict and counter suicide attacks.

"This is a very coarse finding, not the last word by any means," cautions Subrahmanian, adding that a lot more data and analysis would be needed to refine that rule as well as come up with other, more useful ones.

Subrahmanian directs the University of Maryland's Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS).



April 30, 2007


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Meet the Clark Scholars Class of ’29

UMD Semiconductor Retreat Builds Strategic Momentum

UMD’s Team RoboScout Delivers Again

UMD - KETEP Research Collaboration Solidified

Tom Hedberg Named ASME Fellow for Engineering Leadership

Ph.D. Student Presents Neural Research at BMES 2025

Clean Energy critical for quantum/AI

Celebrating our Native and Indigenous Community

Future Engineers Tour Robotics Labs at Maryland

MRC Seminar Series Starts with Jellyfish-Inspired Robotics

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home