Requires the Administrator to review AI and machine learning technologies for airport efficiency and safety. Includes examination of jet bridges, airport service vehicles, aircraft taxi, and other areas. Mandates a report to Congress within one year, including China's AI applications.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act from the U.S. Congress with mandatory obligations on the FAA Administrator to conduct a review and submit a report within a specified timeframe.
This document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains. It primarily addresses operational safety and efficiency concerns in airport operations (subdomain 7.3 - Lack of robustness) through a technology review mandate. There is no substantive coverage of other risk domains as the document focuses on conducting a review rather than establishing governance measures for specific AI risks.
This document primarily governs the Trade, Transportation and Utilities sector, specifically focusing on aviation and airport operations. The mandate for the FAA Administrator to review AI/ML technologies for airport efficiency and safety directly regulates transportation infrastructure and operations.
The document primarily covers the Plan and Design stage by mandating a review of current and planned AI/ML technologies for airport applications. It implicitly touches on Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages through its focus on improving efficiency and safety of AI systems in operational airport contexts.
The document explicitly mentions both 'artificial intelligence' and 'machine learning technologies' but does not define them or specify particular types such as frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, or generative AI. No compute thresholds or distinctions between open-weight and closed models are mentioned.
United States Congress
The document is a section of the FAA Research and Development Act of 2023, which is enacted by the United States Congress as indicated by the authority field.
United States Congress; appropriate committees of Congress
Congress enforces compliance through its oversight function, requiring the Administrator to submit a report to appropriate committees within one year, enabling Congressional monitoring and potential follow-up actions.
appropriate committees of Congress
The appropriate committees of Congress will receive and review the report, thereby monitoring the FAA's implementation of the technology review and its findings.
FAA Administrator; Federal Aviation Administration
The Administrator (of the FAA) is the primary target who must conduct the review and submit the report. The document regulates the actions and obligations of this federal agency official.
2 subdomains (2 Minimal)