Professor Tambe and team provided the first-ever applications of computational game theory for operational security. The first of these deployments was the ARMOR system of game-theoretic algorithms for security (e.g.,
counterterrorism) which started operating at the Los Angeles LAX airport in 2007, deployed by the
LAX police division. This work was followed by pioneering deployments of security games for major security agencies such as the
Federal Air Marshals Service, the
US Coast Guard and the
Transportation Security Administration. Tambe and team were the first to apply AI models, specifically machine learning and game theory, for global scale anti-poaching efforts, as part of the PAWS project for
wildlife conservation. The PAWS AI system has been deployed in collaboration with wildlife conservation agencies to assist rangers around the world. PAWS has helped rangers in removing 10s of 1000s of traps used to kill endangered wildlife in national parks in countries such Cambodia and Uganda. ==Bibliography==