Requires study on AI feasibility and data needs for wildland fire predictive modeling. Analyzes computing requirements to enhance modeling accuracy and speed. Reviews AI's potential use in predictive models. Submits results to Congress and public within one year.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act from the United States Congress with mandatory language requiring specific actions within defined timeframes.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only subdomain 7.3 (Lack of robustness) receiving a coverage score of 2. The document primarily focuses on studying AI feasibility for wildfire modeling rather than addressing AI risks comprehensively.
The document primarily governs Public Administration excluding National Security, specifically federal agencies responsible for wildfire management and forest services. It does not regulate private sector AI development or deployment.
The document focuses primarily on the Plan and Design stage, as it mandates a feasibility study on AI for wildfire modeling. It implicitly touches on Build and Use Model through analysis of computing needs and data requirements, but does not cover deployment or operational monitoring stages.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence in the context of wildland fire predictive modeling. It does not define or distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or specific types of AI. No compute thresholds, foundation models, or open-source considerations are mentioned.
United States Congress
The document is titled as an Act of Congress and represents federal legislation, indicating Congress as the proposing authority.
United States Congress; congressional committees
Congress enforces compliance through the submission requirement to congressional committees and public availability mandate.
congressional committees; the public
Congressional committees receive the study results for oversight, and the public availability requirement enables public monitoring.
The Secretaries (federal agency officials responsible for wildfire management)
The document mandates that 'The Secretaries' conduct the study and submit results, making them the primary targets of this governance instrument.