Smarter Systems, Safer Missions: AI, Autonomy and the Warfighter
Lockheed Martin experts outline how artificial intelligence and autonomous systems can enhance military capabilities by working together as integrated networks. Rather than replacing human operators, these technologies are framed as tools to streamline workload, expand operational reach, and allow pilots and personnel to process information more effectively during missions.
The defence contractor highlights several systems, including the F-35 fighter jet alongside newer platforms such as Vectis, Matrix Autonomy, and the U-Hawk unmanned aircraft. The emphasis throughout is on maintaining human warfighters at the centre of decision-making whilst leveraging automation to handle routine or data-intensive tasks. The presentation positions these developments as the future direction of military autonomy through coordinated, networked technologies rather than standalone autonomous platforms.
- Lockheed Martin presents AI and autonomous systems designed to support military operations whilst keeping human decision-making central to missions
- Technologies including the F-35 fighter jet, Vectis, Matrix Autonomy platform, and U-Hawk unmanned aircraft are positioned to reduce workload and improve information processing for warfighters