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Advanced Interactive Systems, Inc. to Sponsor National Law
Enforcement Museum's "Shoot/Don't Shoot" Simulator
Judgmental Use of Force Simulator will Let Visitors
Experience Law Enforcement's Split-second Decision making Loop
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Washington,
D.C.— Every day, America's law enforcement officers make
split-second, life and death decisions. When the National Law
Enforcement Museum opens in Washington, D.C., visitors will be
able to experience the urgency and stress of those decisions
through Advanced Interactive Systems, Inc.'s "Judgmental Use of
Force Simulator." The $1.2 million partnership between AIS and
the National Law Enforcement Museum will help to build the
simulator exhibit area within The Academy gallery. Within the
safety of AIS's PRISimTM simulator, visitors will test their
decision making ability in a variety of unpredictable
situations.
In
The Academy gallery, visitors will experience how police
recruits are transformed from average citizens into law
enforcement officers. This training requires recruits to learn a
wide array of interrelated academic, physical and tactical
skills to perform their future roles effectively. Roughly
halfway through their training, recruits begin to put their
newly acquired knowledge into practice as demonstrated in the
Tactical Training exhibit. Recruits are trained to use a variety
of weapons, including how to properly deploy less-than-lethal
weapons.
AIS,
Inc.'s PRISimTM Video-Based
Judgment Training Simulator provides highly realistic
use-of-force training that develops the skills required for
personnel armed with both lethal and non-lethal weapons. The
PRISimTM simulator delivers all the
hard realities of a real life operational encounter: The
judgment calls, indecision, sudden fear, partial understanding,
blindside surprise, and eye-blink response even while being
fired upon by the Shootback® cannon are all part of the training
that condition trainees for the real world.
Click here to learn more about the "Shoot/Don't Shoot"
Simulator and
click here to take a virtual tour of the Museum. |
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