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UNSW Sydney Secures $3 Million Defence Project to Develop Next-Generation AI

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Date Published
6 Jan 2026
Priority Score
4
Australian
Yes
Created
9 Jan 2026, 02:16 am

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Researchers will build secure AI technology to handle rapidly changing environments with funding from the Australian Defence Force (ADF).

Summary

UNSW Sydney has been awarded over $3 million by the Australian Defence Force to develop advanced AI systems capable of functioning in dynamic defense environments. This project aims to create multimodal foundation models that can learn, self-update, and operate effectively in unpredictable conditions. The initiative represents a significant step forward in AI capabilities, particularly for national defence applications, as it emphasizes robust security measures such as adversarial training and input/output filtering to protect against potential attacks. The endeavor highlights Australia's growing competency in AI technology, contributing significantly to global AI safety dialogue, and offering potential applications for enhanced decision-making in military settings.

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Type in a search term Search Advanced search Follow Follow Follow UNSW on LinkedIn Follow UNSW on Instagram Follow UNSW on Facebook Follow UNSW on WeChat Follow UNSW on TikTok WhatsApp UNSW Sydney lands $3m Defence project to build next-gen AI Photo: Adobe Stock Louise Templeton, Researchers will build secure AI technology to handle rapidly changing environments with funding from the Australian Defence Force (ADF). UNSW researchers have been awarded $3,220,633 by the ADF's Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator’s Emerging and Disruptive Technologies program. to develop a new generation of multimodal foundation models (MFMs) — powerful AI systems that can take in information from multiple sources, combine and interpret that information and self-update as situations change. AI expert and project lead Professor Flora Salim, from UNSW’s School of Computer Science and Engineering and Deputy Director (Engagement) at the UNSW AI Institute, said the project would focus on creating systems that can perform in highly dynamic defence environments. “We are working on building MFMs that can adapt to rapidly changing conditions, protect against attacks and manipulation, and handle emerging multimodal inputs and novel tasks. By combining these inputs through advanced data fusion and data-efficient pretraining and post-training techniques, we will develop AI systems that continually learn and self-update, to provide a reliable understanding of complex situations,” she said. The models are designed to operate in some of the most challenging environments faced by defence teams, where data is unpredictable, access is intermittent or limited and decisions must be made swiftly. We will develop AI systems that continually learn and self-update, to provide a reliable understanding of complex situations. Professor Flora Salim UNSW School of Computer Science and Engineering and Deputy Director (Engagement) at the UNSW AI Institute. A key innovation will be developing new security defences for multimodal AI that are not currently available. This includes input and output filtering, along with adversarial training to help the system learn to identify and manage attacks and hostile environments. By combining robust performance, cross-modal reasoning and built-in security, the project promises to set a new standard for trustworthy, resilient AI. “This project underpins UNSW’s commitment to translating advanced research into outcomes that genuinely help our partners, whether they’re in academia, industry, government or the broader community,” Head of the School of Computer Science and Engineering Professor Arcot Sowmya said. The Director of UNSW AI Institute, Dr Sue Keay, said the project demonstrated Australian researchers’ strong capabilities in developing home-grown sovereign AI. “I’m proud to work with the chief investigators on this project, Prof. Salim, Prof. Salil Kanhere, Dr Rahat Masood and Dr Aditya Joshi, and their very talented teams. I look forward to watching their work integrated into critical ADF infrastructure,” she said. Media enquiries For enquiries about this story please contact UNSW Media: Email: media@unsw.edu.au Featured Expert Flora Salim, Share this story Share this page on Email Share this page on Facebook Share this page on Twitter Share this page on LinkedIn Share this page on WhatsApp Share this page on FacebookMessenger Share this page on WeChat Share this page on Copy Related stories What is AI superintelligence? Could it destroy humanity? And is it really almost here? UNSW researchers honoured in Women in AI Awards The defence review fails to address the third revolution in warfare: artificial intelligence UNSW researcher receives award recognising women in artificial intelligence