Information superiority is considered a critical capability for
future joint forces. As advances in technology continue to
boost our ability to communicate in new and different ways,
military forces are restructuring to incorporate these technologies.
Yet we are still limited in our ability to measure
the contributions made by information networks. We describe
three recent studies at the Naval Postgraduate School
that involve information networks. First, we examine a
simulation model expanded from a two-person, zero-sum
game to explore how information superiority contributes
to battlefield results and how sensitive it is to information
quality. Second, we examine how network-enabled communications
affect the logistics operations in a centralized
receiving and shipping point. The results are intended to
provide operational insights for terminal node operations
within a sustainment base. Third, we explore how social
networks might be incorporated into agent-based models
representing civilian populations in stability operations