The Royal Netherlands Air Force is experimenting with a cutting-edge AI-driven flight simulator that tailors pilot training according to real-time brain activity. Using a brain–computer interface (BCI) developed at the Royal Netherlands Aerospace Centre; trainee fighter pilots wear electrodes that capture electrical brain signals during virtual reality missions. An AI model analyses these signals to estimate cognitive workload (whether a pilot is under-challenged or overloaded) and dynamically adjusts the difficulty of simulation tasks accordingly, rather than relying on fixed, pre-programmed lesson progressions.
Early trials involving fifteen pilots showed that while the adaptive system didn’t produce measurable improvements in flying performance compared with conventional training, participants reported a clear preference for the brain-adaptive approach, describing it as more engaging and realistic. The adaptive training aims to keep pilots in a mental sweet spot for learning, helping avoid both boredom and overwhelm. However, researchers acknowledge challenges in accurately interpreting individual brain signals, and the technology remains experimental as they work toward refining workload estimation.
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