DARPA scouting for ‘revolutionary’ ideas

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is looking for unconventional approaches that challenge conventional wisdom and have the potential to radically change established practices.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is looking for “revolutionary” research ideas that aren’t being addressed in current research projects.

The broad agency announcement issued by DARPA’s Information Innovation Office (I2O) outlined its existing programs that fall into four main areas:

  • Proficient artificial intelligence
  • Advantage in cyber operations
  • Confidence in information domain
  • Resilient, adaptable and secure systems

Now DARPA wants potential respondents to look at I2O’s current programs and suggest something completely different.

“I2O seeks unconventional software-based approaches that are outside the mainstream, challenge accepted assumptions and have the potential to radically change established practice,” the agency wrote in its BAA.

Efforts that are creative and agile both in terms of the technologies proposed and in the structure of the approach are encouraged, but  DARPA warns against proposing work that has already been completed or funded by the agency or anyone else in the government.

Funding levels haven’t been determined yet. Proposals will be evaluated for overall scientific and technical merit, potential contribution and relevance to DARPA’s mission and cost.

DARPA has given respondents plenty of runway to work with. Abstracts are due Sept. 23, 2021. Proposals are due at noon on Oct. 28, 2021.

Current I2O programs can be found here.

This article was first posted to Washington Technology, a sibling site to Defense Technology.