Defense Notices


All students and faculty are welcome to attend the final defense of EECS graduate students completing their M.S. or Ph.D. degrees. Defense notices for M.S./Ph.D. presentations for this year and several previous years are listed below in reverse chronological order.

Students who are nearing the completion of their M.S./Ph.D. research should schedule their final defenses through the EECS graduate office at least THREE WEEKS PRIOR to their presentation date so that there is time to complete the degree requirements check, and post the presentation announcement online.

Upcoming Defense Notices

Elizabeth Wyss

A New Frontier for Software Security: Diving Deep into npm

When & Where:


Eaton Hall, Room 2001B

Committee Members:

Drew Davidson, Chair
Alex Bardas
Fengjun Li
Bo Luo
J. Walker

Abstract

Open-source package managers (e.g., npm for Node.js) have become an established component of modern software development. Rather than creating applications from scratch, developers may employ modular software dependencies and frameworks--called packages--to serve as building blocks for writing larger applications. Package managers make this process easy. With a simple command line directive, developers are able to quickly fetch and install packages across vast open-source repositories. npm--the largest of such repositories--alone hosts millions of unique packages and serves billions of package downloads each week. 

However, the widespread code sharing resulting from open-source package managers also presents novel security implications. Vulnerable or malicious code hiding deep within package dependency trees can be leveraged downstream to attack both software developers and the end-users of their applications. This downstream flow of software dependencies--dubbed the software supply chain--is critical to secure.

This research provides a deep dive into the npm-centric software supply chain, exploring distinctive phenomena that impact its overall security and usability. Such factors include (i) hidden code clones--which may stealthily propagate known vulnerabilities, (ii) install-time attacks enabled by unmediated installation scripts, (iii) hard-coded URLs residing in package code, (iv) the impacts of open-source development practices, (v) package compromise via malicious updates, (vi) spammers disseminating phishing links within package metadata, and (vii) abuse of cryptocurrency protocols designed to reward the creators of high-impact packages. For each facet, tooling is presented to identify and/or mitigate potential security impacts. Ultimately, it is our hope that this research fosters greater awareness, deeper understanding, and further efforts to forge a new frontier for the security of modern software supply chains. 


Alfred Fontes

Optimization and Trade-Space Analysis of Pulsed Radar-Communication Waveforms using Constant Envelope Modulations

When & Where:


Nichols Hall, Room 246 (Executive Conference Room)

Committee Members:

Patrick McCormick, Chair
Shannon Blunt
Jonathan Owen


Abstract

Dual function radar communications (DFRC) is a method of co-designing a single radio frequency system to perform simultaneous radar and communications service. DFRC is ultimately a compromise between radar sensing performance and communications data throughput due to the conflicting requirements between the sensing and information-bearing signals.

A novel waveform-based DFRC approach is phase attached radar communications (PARC), where a communications signal is embedded onto a radar pulse via the phase modulation between the two signals. The PARC framework is used here in a new waveform design technique that designs the radar component of a PARC signal to match the PARC DFRC waveform expected power spectral density (PSD) to a desired spectral template. This provides better control over the PARC signal spectrum, which mitigates the issue of PARC radar performance degradation from spectral growth due to the communications signal. 

The characteristics of optimized PARC waveforms are then analyzed to establish a trade-space between radar and communications performance within a PARC DFRC scenario. This is done by sampling the DFRC trade-space continuum with waveforms that contain a varying degree of communications bandwidth, from a pure radar waveform (no embedded communications) to a pure communications waveform (no radar component). Radar performance, which is degraded by range sidelobe modulation (RSM) from the communications signal randomness, is measured from the PARC signal variance across pulses; data throughput is established as the communications performance metric. Comparing the values of these two measures as a function of communications symbol rate explores the trade-offs in performance between radar and communications with optimized PARC waveforms.


Arin Dutta

Performance Analysis of Distributed Raman Amplification with Different Pumping Configurations

When & Where:


Nichols Hall, Room 246 (Executive Conference Room)

Committee Members:

Rongqing Hui, Chair
Morteza Hashemi
Rachel Jarvis
Alessandro Salandrino
Hui Zhao

Abstract

As internet services like high-definition videos, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence keep growing, optical networks need to keep up with the demand for more capacity. Optical amplifiers play a crucial role in offsetting fiber loss and enabling long-distance wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transmission in high-capacity systems. Various methods have been proposed to enhance the capacity and reach of fiber communication systems, including advanced modulation formats, dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) over ultra-wide bands, space-division multiplexing, and high-performance digital signal processing (DSP) technologies. To maintain higher data rates along with maximizing the spectral efficiency of multi-level modulated signals, a higher Optical Signal-to-Noise Ratio (OSNR) is necessary. Despite advancements in coherent optical communication systems, the spectral efficiency of multi-level modulated signals is ultimately constrained by fiber nonlinearity. Raman amplification is an attractive solution for wide-band amplification with low noise figures in multi-band systems.

Distributed Raman Amplification (DRA) have been deployed in recent high-capacity transmission experiments to achieve a relatively flat signal power distribution along the optical path and offers the unique advantage of using conventional low-loss silica fibers as the gain medium, effectively transforming passive optical fibers into active or amplifying waveguides. Also, DRA provides gain at any wavelength by selecting the appropriate pump wavelength, enabling operation in signal bands outside the Erbium doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) bands. Forward (FW) Raman pumping configuration in DRA can be adopted to further improve the DRA performance as it is more efficient in OSNR improvement because the optical noise is generated near the beginning of the fiber span and attenuated along the fiber. Dual-order FW pumping scheme helps to reduce the non-linear effect of the optical signal and improves OSNR by more uniformly distributing the Raman gain along the transmission span.

The major concern with Forward Distributed Raman Amplification (FW DRA) is the fluctuation in pump power, known as relative intensity noise (RIN), which transfers from the pump laser to both the intensity and phase of the transmitted optical signal as they propagate in the same direction. Additionally, another concern of FW DRA is the rise in signal optical power near the start of the fiber span, leading to an increase in the non-linear phase shift of the signal. These factors, including RIN transfer-induced noise and non-linear noise, contribute to the degradation of system performance in FW DRA systems at the receiver.

As the performance of DRA with backward pumping is well understood with relatively low impact of RIN transfer, our research  is focused on the FW pumping configuration, and is intended to provide a comprehensive analysis on the system performance impact of dual order FW Raman pumping, including signal intensity and phase noise induced by the RINs of both 1st and the 2nd order pump lasers, as well as the impacts of linear and nonlinear noise. The efficiencies of pump RIN to signal intensity and phase noise transfer are theoretically analyzed and experimentally verified by applying a shallow intensity modulation to the pump laser to mimic the RIN. The results indicate that the efficiency of the 2nd order pump RIN to signal phase noise transfer can be more than 2 orders of magnitude higher than that from the 1st order pump. Then the performance of the dual order FW Raman configurations is compared with that of single order Raman pumping to understand trade-offs of system parameters. The nonlinear interference (NLI) noise is analyzed to study the overall OSNR improvement when employing a 2nd order Raman pump. Finally, a DWDM system with 16-QAM modulation is used as an example to investigate the benefit of DRA with dual order Raman pumping and with different pump RIN levels. We also consider a DRA system using a 1st order incoherent pump together with a 2nd order coherent pump. Although dual order FW pumping corresponds to a slight increase of linear amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) compared to using only a 1st order pump, its major advantage comes from the reduction of nonlinear interference noise in a DWDM system. Because the RIN of the 2nd order pump has much higher impact than that of the 1st order pump, there should be more stringent requirement on the RIN of the 2nd order pump laser when dual order FW pumping scheme is used for DRA for efficient fiber-optic communication. Also, the result of system performance analysis reveals that higher baud rate systems, like those operating at 100Gbaud, are less affected by pump laser RIN due to the low-pass characteristics of the transfer of pump RIN to signal phase noise.


Audrey Mockenhaupt

Using Dual Function Radar Communication Waveforms for Synthetic Aperture Radar Automatic Target Recognition

When & Where:


Nichols Hall, Room 246 (Executive Conference Room)

Committee Members:

Patrick McCormick, Chair
Shannon Blunt
Jon Owen


Abstract

Pending.


Rich Simeon

Delay-Doppler Channel Estimation for High-Speed Aeronautical Mobile Telemetry Applications

When & Where:


Eaton Hall, Room 2001B

Committee Members:

Erik Perrins, Chair
Shannon Blunt
Morteza Hashemi
Jim Stiles
Craig McLaughlin

Abstract

The next generation of digital communications systems aims to operate in high-Doppler environments such as high-speed trains and non-terrestrial networks that utilize satellites in low-Earth orbit. Current generation systems use Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing modulation which is known to suffer from inter-carrier interference (ICI) when different channel paths have dissimilar Doppler shifts.

A new Orthogonal Time Frequency Space (OTFS) modulation (also known as Delay-Doppler modulation) is proposed as a candidate modulation for 6G networks that is resilient to ICI. To date, OTFS demodulation designs have focused on the use cases of popular urban terrestrial channel models where path delay spread is a fraction of the OTFS symbol duration. However, wireless wide-area networks that operate in the aeronautical mobile telemetry (AMT) space can have large path delay spreads due to reflections from distant geographic features. This presents problems for existing channel estimation techniques which assume a small maximum expected channel delay, since data transmission is paused to sound the channel by an amount equal to twice the maximum channel delay. The dropout in data contributes to a reduction in spectral efficiency.

Our research addresses OTFS limitations in the AMT use case. We start with an exemplary OTFS framework with parameters optimized for AMT. Following system design, we focus on two distinct areas to improve OTFS performance in the AMT environment. First we propose a new channel estimation technique using a pilot signal superimposed over data that can measure large delay spread channels with no penalty in spectral efficiency. A successive interference cancellation algorithm is used to iteratively improve channel estimates and jointly decode data. A second aspect of our research aims to equalize in delay-Doppler space. In the delay-Doppler paradigm, the rapid channel variations seen in the time-frequency domain is transformed into a sparse quasi-stationary channel in the delay-Doppler domain. We propose to use machine learning using Gaussian Process Regression to take advantage of the sparse and stationary channel and learn the channel parameters to compensate for the effects of fractional Doppler in which simpler channel estimation techniques cannot mitigate. Both areas of research can advance the robustness of OTFS across all communications systems.


Mohammad Ful Hossain Seikh

AAFIYA: Antenna Analysis in Frequency-domain for Impedance and Yield Assessment

When & Where:


Eaton Hall, Room 2001B

Committee Members:

Jim Stiles, Chair
Rachel Jarvis
Alessandro Salandrino


Abstract

This project presents AAFIYA (Antenna Analysis in Frequency-domain for Impedance and Yield Assessment), a modular Python toolkit developed to automate and streamline the characterization and analysis of radiofrequency (RF) antennas using both measurement and simulation data. Motivated by the need for reproducible, flexible, and publication-ready workflows in modern antenna research, AAFIYA provides comprehensive support for all major antenna metrics, including S-parameters, impedance, gain and beam patterns, polarization purity, and calibration-based yield estimation. The toolkit features robust data ingestion from standard formats (such as Touchstone files and beam pattern text files), vectorized computation of RF metrics, and high-quality plotting utilities suitable for scientific publication.

Validation was carried out using measurements from industry-standard electromagnetic anechoic chamber setups involving both Log Periodic Dipole Array (LPDA) reference antennas and Askaryan Radio Array (ARA) Bottom Vertically Polarized (BVPol) antennas, covering a frequency range of 50–1500 MHz. Key performance metrics, such as broadband impedance matching, S11 and S21 related calculations, 3D realized gain patterns, vector effective lengths,  and cross-polarization ratio, were extracted and compared against full-wave electromagnetic simulations (using HFSS and WIPL-D). The results demonstrate close agreement between measurement and simulation, confirming the reliability of the workflow and calibration methodology.

AAFIYA’s open-source, extensible design enables rapid adaptation to new experiments and provides a foundation for future integration with machine learning and evolutionary optimization algorithms. This work not only delivers a validated toolkit for antenna research and pedagogy but also sets the stage for next-generation approaches in automated antenna design, optimization, and performance analysis.


Past Defense Notices

Dates

LEI SHI

Multichannel Sense-and-Avoid Radar for Small UAVs

When & Where:


2139 Learned Hall

Committee Members:

Chris Allen, Chair
Shannon Blunt
Ron Hui
Jim Stiles
Dongkyu Choi

Abstract

A multichannel sense-and-avoid radar system targeted for small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), such as the 40% Yak-54 RC aircraft, is being developed to assist the integration of UAVs into the national air space. This frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) radar system utilizes a two-dimensional fast-Fourier transform process to detect targets in range and Doppler. Interferometry using a 5-element receiver array allows the radar to calculate the azimuth/elevation angles of the target relative to itself. These tasks are being performed in real time with a targeted update rate of 10 Hz utilizing highly-integrated radar-ready components and an FPGA based processor. The focus of the research is on analysis and enhancement of the radar performance by implementing various detection and predictive algorithms such as extended Kalman filtering and constant false alarm rate detection. By tracking targets and predicting their future location, false alarms caused by anomalies can be minimized. Furthermore, targets located at the same range and Doppler will corrupt each other’s signals during interferometic processing thus giving the autopilot corrupted angle information. Using a predictive algorithm these occurrences can be avoided with some level of confidence.


JUNYAN LI

Geo-Diversity Routing Protocol Implementation in ns-3

When & Where:


246 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

James Sterbenz, Chair
Victor Frost
Bo Luo


Abstract

The path geo-diversity routing protocol described in this report takes advantage of geographical diversity of physical network topology, and quickens the routing selection. By importing this mechanism, a more accurate path could be provided instead of multiple useless attempts when area-based challenges occur in the network. A k-shortest path algorithm is introduced, followed by a modified algorithm. These two algorithms are implemented in ns-3, and tested in both grid network and real network. Simulation results show that they provide better performance compared to OSPF, as multiple geo-diverse paths are calculated to provide reliable performance.


NAJLA AHMAD

Intent Recognition in Multi-Agent Systems: Collective Box Pushing and Cow Herding

When & Where:


250 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

Arvin Agah, Chair
Victor Frost
Jerzy Grzymala-Busse
Bo Luo
Sara Kieweg

Abstract

In a multi-agent system, an idle agent may be available to assist other agents in the system. An agent architecture called intent recognition is proposed to accomplish this with minimal communication. 
In order to assist other agents in the system, an agent performing recognition observes the tasks other agents are performing. Unlike the much studied field of plan recognition, the overall intent of an agent is recognized instead of a specific plan. The observing agent may use capabilities that it has not observed. This study focuses on the key research questions of: (1) What are intent recognition systems? (2) How can these be used in order to have agents autonomously assist each other effectively and efficiently? A conceptual framework is proposed for intent recognition systems. An implementation of the conceptual framework is tested and evaluated. We hypothesize that using intent recognition in a multi-agent system increases utility (where utility is domain specific) and decreases the amount of communication. We test our hypotheses using two experimental series in the domains of Box Pushing, where agents attempt to push boxes to specified locations; and Cow Herding, where agents attempt to herd cow agents into team corrals. A set of metrics, including task time and number of communications, is used to compare the performance of plan recognition and intent recognition. In both sets of experimental series, intent recognition agents communicate fewer times than plan recognition agents. In addition, unlike plan recognition, when agents use the novel approach of intent recognition, they select unobserved actions to perform, which was seen in both experimental series. Intent recognition agents were also able to outperform plan recognition agents by sometimes reducing task completion time in the Box Pushing domain and consistently scoring more points in the Cow Herding domain.


JUSTIN METCALF

Signal Processing for Non-Gaussian Statistics: Clutter Distribution Identification and Adaptive Threshold Estimation

When & Where:


129 Nichols

Committee Members:

Shannon Blunt, Chair
Luke Huan
Lingjia Liu
Jim Stiles
Tyrone Duncan

Abstract

We examine the problem of determining a decision threshold for the binary hypothesis test that naturally arises when a radar system must decide if there is a target present in a range cell under test. Modern radar systems require predictable, low, constant rates of false alarm (i.e. when unwanted noise and clutter returns are mistaken for a target). Measured clutter returns have often been fitted to heavy tailed, non-Gaussian distributions. The heavy tails on these distributions cause an unacceptable rise in the number of false alarms. We use the class of spherically invariant random vectors (SIRVs) to model clutter returns. SIRVs arise from a phenomenological consideration of the radar sensing problem, and include both the Gaussian distribution and most commonly reported non-Gaussian clutter distributions (e.g. K distribution, Weibull distribution). We propose an extension of a prior technique called the Ozturk algorithm. The Ozturk algorithm generates a graphical library of points corresponding to known SIRV distributions. These points are generated from linked vectors whose magnitude is derived from the order statistics of the SIRV distributions. Measured data is then compared to the library and a distribution is chosen that best approximates the measured data. Our extension introduces a framework of weighting functions and adaptively scaling of the measured data. Further, we extend the Ozturk algorithm to both a distribution classi fication technique as well as a method of determining an adaptive threshold in data that may not belong to a known distribution. Special attention is paid to producing a robust, adaptive estimation of the detection threshold.


EGEMEN CETINKAYA

Modelling and Design of Resilient Networks under Challenges

When & Where:


246 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

James Sterbenz, Chair
Victor Frost
Bo Luo
Gary Minden
Tyrone Duncan

Abstract

Communication networks, in particular the Internet, face a variety of challenges that can disrupt our daily lives resulting in the loss of human lives and significant financial costs in the worst cases. We define challenges as external events that trigger faults that eventually result in service failures. Understanding these challenges accordingly is essential for improvement of the current networks and for designing Future Internet architectures. This dissertation presents a taxonomy of challenges that can help evaluate design choices for the current and Future Internet. Graph models to analyse critical infrastructures are examined and a multilevel graph model is developed to study interdependencies between different networks. Furthermore, graph-theoretic heuristic optimisation algorithms are developed. These heuristic algorithms add links to increase the resilience of networks in the least costly manner and they are computationally less expensive than an exhaustive search algorithm. The performance of networks under random failures, targeted attacks, and correlated area-based challenges are evaluated by the challenge simulation module that we developed. The GpENI Future Internet testbed is used to conduct experiments to evaluate the performance of the heuristic algorithms developed.


AQSA PATEL

Interpretation of SIRAL Waveforms using Ultra-wideband Radar Altimeter Data

When & Where:


317 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

Carl Leuschen, Chair
Swapan Chakrabarti
Prasad Gogineni
John Paden
David Braaten

Abstract

The surface-elevation of ice sheets and sea ice is currently measured using both satellite and airborne radar altimeters. These measurements are used for generating mass balance estimates of ice sheets and thickness estimates of sea ice. However, due to the penetration of the altimeter signal into the snow there is ambiguity between the surface tracking point and the actual surface location which produces errors in the surface elevation measurement. Until now there is no comprehensive study done to address how the penetration of the Ku-band signal affects the shape of the return signal over various snow zones and sea ice. Therefore, it is important to study the effect sub-surface scattering and seasonal variations in the properties of snow pack have on the return waveform to correctly interpret the satellite radar altimeter data. To address this problem, an ultra-wide bandwidth Ku-band radar altimeter was developed at the Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS). The CReSIS Ku-band Altimeter (CKA) operates over the frequency range of 12 to 18 GHz providing very fine resolution to resolve the sub-surface features of the snow. The CKA is design to encompass the frequency band of SIRAL, a satellite radar altimeter on board CryoSat-2, operating from 13.4 to 13.75 GHz. The data from CKA can be used to simulate SIRAL data, and the simulated SIRAL waveforms can help us understand the effect of signal penetration and sub-surface scattering on the low bandwidth satellite altimeter. The extensive CKA data collected as a part of the Operation Ice Bridge (OIB) campaign can be used to interpret SIRAL data over surfaces with varying snow conditions. The goal of this research is to use modeling and data inter-comparisons from CKA and satellite measurements to investigate the effect of signal penetration into snow and geophysical snow conditions on the retrieval of surface elevation from satellite radar altimeters, such as SIRAL. Based on the results of this investigation, the plan is to improve the tracking algorithms used by SIRAL to effectively track the actual surface location accurately.


MEEYOUNG PARK

HealthTrust: Assessing the Trustworthiness of Healthcare Information on the Internet

When & Where:


250 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

Bo Luo, Chair
Xue-Wen Chen
Arvin Agah
Luke Huan
Michael Wang

Abstract

As well recognized, healthcare information is growing exponentially and is made more available to public. Frequent users such as medical professionals and patients are highly dependent on the web sources to get the appropriate information promptly. However, the trustworthiness of the web information can be hardly discriminated due to the fast and augmentative properties of the Internet. Most search engines provide relevant pages to given keywords, but the results might contain unreliable or biased information. 

In this dissertation, I proposed a new system named HealthTrust, which automatically assesses the trustworthiness of healthcare information over the Internet. First, in the first phase, a new ranking algorithm for structure-based analysis is adopted. The basic hypothesis is that trustworthy pages are more likely to link to trustworthy pages. In this way, the original set of positive and negative seeds will propagate over the Web graph. Next, in the second phase, the content-consistency between general healthcare-related webpages and trusted sites is evaluated using information retrieval techniques to evaluate the context of the webpage. In addition, sentence modeling is employed to generate contents-based ranking for each page. Finally, an iterative algorithm is developed to integrate the two components.


STEVE PENNINGTON

Spectrum Coverage Estimation Using Large Scale Measurements

When & Where:


246 Nichols Hall

Committee Members:

Joe Evans, Chair
Arvin Agah
Victor Frost
Gary Minden
Ronald Aust

Abstract

Existing RF path loss models are useful for prediction but do not necessarily exploit additional knowledge such as differing terrain features. This research will examine the relationship between terrain type (determined by public GIS data sets) and empirical path loss model parameters through the use of a large scale data collection platform. A large scale measurement campaign will be undertaken to sample the UHF DTV bands from a variety of environments using a set of portable software defined radio sensors. Machine learning and geostatistical algorithms will then be used to learn path loss parameters for generalized terrain types.


MARK CALNON

Assistive Robotics for the Elderly: Encouraging Trust and Acceptance Using Affective Body Language

When & Where:


2001B Eaton Hall

Committee Members:

Arvin Agah, Chair
Frank Brown
Jerzy Grzymala-Busse
Bo Luo
Richard Branham

Abstract

"Assistive robotics for the elderly has become a significant area of research, driven primarily by a rapidly aging global population. Between 2011 and 2050, the number of people aged 60 and over is expected to climb from 893 million to 2.4 billion. In addition to a rapidly aging global population, a growing shortage of caretakers has placed additional urgency on the search for alternative solutions. 

Despite the potential benefits of assistive robotics, one significant hurdle that remains is designing robots that the elderly are willing to use. Not only must assistive robots be effective at monitoring and caring for the elderly, but they must also be acceptable to a wide range of elderly individuals. While a variety of factors can influence the acceptability of a robot, past research has focused primarily on the physical embodiment of the robot. 

Social robotics, however, uses human-robot interactions to study the many social factors that can influence the acceptability of a robot, including affective behaviors, or behaviors that simulate personality and emotion. While the majority of research in affective behaviors has focused on facial expressions, these methods require sophisticated anthropomorphic representations, which are not generally preferred by the elderly. 

However, in addition to facial expressions, body language can also be an effective communicator of emotions and personalities. This research will demonstrate the effectiveness of using non-verbal behaviors to simulate a variety of personalities and emotions on the Aldebaran Nao, as well as the impact these behaviors have on the elderly’s trust and acceptance of the assistive robot. By adapting the personalities and emotions of an assistive robot both to the task it is performing, as well as to individual elderly users, this research will ultimately enable assistive robots to perform as more effective caretakers for the elderly."


DAVID HARVIE

Targeted Scrum: Software Development Inspired by Mission Command

When & Where:


2001B Eaton Hall

Committee Members:

Arvin Agah, Chair
Bo Luo
Jim Miller
Hossein Saiedian
Prajna Dhar

Abstract

Software development has been and continues to be a difficult enterprise. As early as the 1960’s, computer experts recognized the need to develop working and reliable software, within budget and on time. One of the major obstacles to successful software development is the inevitability of changing requirements. Agile software development methods, such as Extreme Programming and Scrum, emerged in the 1990’s as responses to deal with constant change. However, agile software development methods have their own set of weaknesses. Two specific weaknesses with Scrum are a lack of initial planning and a lack of an overall architecture. 
Military operations are another field that must deal with constantly changing requirements in complex environments. In response to this inescapable change, the military these days has primarily employed mission command to direct operations. Mission command is the philosophy where a commander gives subordinates his/her intent and desired end state for an operation, and then the subordinates have appropriate flexibility to operate to achieve that intent and end state. This research effort seeks to use inspirations from mission command to improve certain aspects of agile software development, namely Scrum, both in terms of the process and the product. 
This research effort seeks to address the lack of initial planning in Scrum with the addition of a Product Design Meeting at the onset of the process. This effort also addresses the lack of an overall architecture using two artifacts derived from mission command, the product’s end state and lines of effort (LOEs) necessary to achieve that end state. The addition of the Product Design Meeting, product end state, and LOEs will add more formalism to an agile method. However, we hypothesize that the benefits of adding those techniques will offset any perceived loss of agility.