Patents by Inventor Adam C. Braun

Adam C. Braun has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7327348
    Abstract: The present invention provides haptic sensations for a haptic feedback device and especially for a rotational device such as a knob. Force effects such as a hill force effect and barrier force effect allow easier selection of menu items, menus, values, or other options by the user. Force models are also described to allow greater selection functionality, such as a scrolling list with detents and rate control borders, a jog shuttle, a push-turn model, a double-push model, and a cast control model.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 14, 2003
    Date of Patent: February 5, 2008
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Alex S. Goldenberg, Steven P. Vassallo, Kenneth M. Martin, Adam C. Braun
  • Patent number: 7299321
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for efficient management of memory and force output in a force feedback system including a host computer and a force feedback device. A representation of device memory is maintained on the host computer to allow the host computer knowledge and control over storage and force effects in the device memory. A host cache for force effects is provided to allow almost unlimited numbers of force effects to be created for the device, where any force effects not able to fit in device memory are stored in the host cache. Other aspects of the invention include a playlist stored on the device of force effects being played by the device, and management of force output using relatively small, discrete time intervals.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 20, 2007
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Jonathan L. Beamer, Dean C. Chang
  • Patent number: 7283123
    Abstract: A low-cost haptic feedback device that provides spatially-based sensations such as textures in correlation with a displayed graphical environment. The device includes a housing, a sensor device, and an actuator for applying a force to the user. A local processor reports relative sensor data to the host processor and receives force information from the host processor. The host force information causes a texture sensation to be output by the actuator, the texture sensation providing forces to the user at least approximately spatially correlated with predefined locations in the graphical environment as determined by a local processor. In some embodiments, the local processor can model a position of the cursor while the cursor interacts with the texture field, where the modeled position is used for determining the force output to the user, and the force information from the host can include a gating command to activate or deactivate the texture sensation when the cursor enters or exits the texture field.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 12, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 16, 2007
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Louis B. Rosenberg, Kenneth M. Martin
  • Patent number: 7233476
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for providing thermal protection for actuators used in haptic feedback interface devices. An average energy in the actuator over a predetermined period of time is determined, and the maximum allowable current level in the actuator is reduced if the average energy is determined to exceed a predetermined warning energy level. The maximum allowable current level can be reduced to a sustainable current level if the average energy reaches a maximum energy level allowed, and the maximum allowable current level in the actuator can be raised if the average energy is determined to be below the predetermined warning energy level. Preferably, the maximum allowable current level is reduced smoothly as a ramp function.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 10, 2001
    Date of Patent: June 19, 2007
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Alex S. Goldenberg, Adam C. Braun, Paul D. Batcheller
  • Patent number: 7233313
    Abstract: The present invention provides a control knob on a device that allows a user to control functions of the device. In one embodiment, the knob is rotatable in a rotary degree of freedom and moveable in at least one transverse direction approximately perpendicular to the axis. An actuator is coupled to the knob to output a force in the rotary degree of freedom about the axis, thus providing force feedback. In a different embodiment, the knob is provided with force feedback in a rotary degree of freedom about an axis and is also moveable in a linear degree of freedom approximately parallel to the axis, allowing the knob to be pushed and/or pulled by the user. The device controlled by the knob can be a variety of types of devices, such as an audio device, video device, etc. The device can also include a display providing an image updated in response to manipulation of the knob.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 13, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 19, 2007
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Michael D. Levin, Kenneth M. Martin, Bruce M. Schena, Adam C. Braun, Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Patent number: 7218310
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for providing high strength, low frequency tactile sensations using an inertial actuator in a haptic feedback interface device, such as an actuator driving an oscillating inertial mass. A commanded low frequency is modulated or combined with a higher frequency at which the tactile sensations feel stronger, where the resulting signal is used to output a tactile sensation at the higher frequency and convey the commanded low frequency to the user. One embodiment provides higher frequency pulse bursts at the desired low frequency wherein the higher frequency pulse bursts are at or near a resonant frequency of the actuator; other embodiments modulate or otherwise vary the amplitude of the higher frequency signal according to the desired low frequency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 17, 2001
    Date of Patent: May 15, 2007
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Kollin M. Tierling, Adam C. Braun, Alex Goldenberg
  • Patent number: 7209117
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for shaping force signals for a force feedback device. A source wave is provided and is defined by a set of control parameters (including a steady state magnitude, a frequency value and a duration value) and modified by a set of impulse parameters (including an impulse magnitude, and a settle time representing a time required for the impulse magnitude to change to the steady-state magnitude). Optionally, application parameters specifying a direction of force signal and trigger parameters specifying activating buttons can also be provided for the source wave. Using a host processor or a local processor, the force signal is formed from the source wave and the sets of control parameters and impulse parameters, where the force signal includes an impulse signal followed by a continual steady-state signal after an expiration of the settle time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 9, 2003
    Date of Patent: April 24, 2007
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun
  • Patent number: 7168042
    Abstract: Force effects for a graphical user interface of a computer are provided based on user preference information, which indicates the types of graphical objects in the graphical user interface which are to have force effects associated with them, and at least one particular force effect assigned to each of those types of graphical objects. An output of a force sensation by a haptic feedback device to the user is based on those assigned force effects and occurs when a displayed cursor controlled by a user interacts with a graphical object having one of the types. An architecture for a host computer allowing multi-tasking application programs to interface with a feedback device is also disclosed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 9, 2001
    Date of Patent: January 23, 2007
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Jonathan L. Beamer, Louis B. Rosenberg, Dean C. Chang
  • Patent number: 7038657
    Abstract: Power management for an interface device that is manipulated by a user and in communication with a host computer and provides forces to the user. The device includes a sensor and an actuator. One embodiment provides first power from the host computer over a serial interface and second power from a power adapter. Another embodiment provides first power from the host computer and second power from a power storage device on the interface device that supplies power to the actuator. Another embodiment provides a power adapter supplying a portion of the first power to the sensor and a portion to the actuator, and a power storage device on the interface device provides second power to the actuator.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 19, 2002
    Date of Patent: May 2, 2006
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun, Bruce M. Schena
  • Patent number: 6982700
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for controlling and providing force feedback using an interface device manipulated by a user. A microprocessor is provided local to the interface device and reads sensor data from sensors that describes the position and/or other information about a user object moved by the user, such as a joystick. The microprocessor controls actuators to provide forces on the user object and provides the sensor data to a host computer that is coupled to the interface device. The host computer sends high level host commands to the local microprocessor, and the microprocessor independently implements a local reflex process based on the high level command to provide force values to the actuators using sensor data and other parameters. A provided host command protocol includes a variety of different types of host commands and associated command parameters.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 14, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 3, 2006
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun, Mike D. Levin
  • Patent number: 6933920
    Abstract: Embodiments of the present invention provide computer program products, methods, and systems for use with low speed processors and/or low-bandwidth communication links. Embodiments of the present invention allows low-bandwidth communication links to proceed at a level similar to a high-bandwidth communication link by filtering data that the filter deems contains substantially identical haptic feedback parameters as a previously transmitted data.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 24, 2002
    Date of Patent: August 23, 2005
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Robert Lacroix, Adam C. Braun
  • Patent number: 6903721
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for compensating for position slip in interface devices that may occur between a manipulandum and a sensor of the device due to a mechanical transmission. A device position delta is determined from a sensed position of a manipulandum of an interface device. It is determined if position slip has occurred caused by a change in position of the manipulandum that was not sensed by a sensor of the interface device, typically caused by a mechanical transmission between sensor and manipulandum. If position slip has occurred, an error in the sensed position caused by the position slip is corrected by adjusting the sensed position to take into account the position slip. The adjusted position delta is used as the position of the manipulandum and the display of objects controlled by the interface device are accordingly compensated.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 11, 2000
    Date of Patent: June 7, 2005
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Kollin M. Tierling, Kenneth M. Martin, Bruce M. Schena
  • Patent number: 6894678
    Abstract: A mouse interface device and method for providing enhanced cursor control and indexing cursor control with force feedback. A force feedback interface device includes a manipulandum, such as a mouse, that is moveable in a local workspace. The device is coupled to a host computer that displays a cursor in a graphical environment, such as a GUI, on a display screen. A cursor position in the display frame is reported to the host computer derived from a reference position of the mouse in the local frame, and the host displays the cursor; for example, the cursor position may be scaled by a ballistics algorithm based on mouse velocity to allow fine positioning or coarse motion of the cursor. A force is output on the mouse based on interactions in the GUI, the force being determined based on mouse reference data or cursor ballistic data, depending on the type of force, to reduce distortion between visual and force outputs. Assistive forces can alternatively be output to achieve the enhanced cursor control.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 21, 2001
    Date of Patent: May 17, 2005
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Jonathan L. Beamer, Adam C. Braun, Dean C. Chang
  • Patent number: 6864877
    Abstract: Directional haptic feedback provided in a haptic feedback interface device. An interface device includes at least two actuator assemblies, which each include a moving inertial mass. A single control signal provided to the actuator assemblies at different magnitudes provides directional inertial sensations felt by the user. A greater magnitude waveform can be applied to one actuator to provide a sensation having a direction approximately corresponding to a position of that actuator in the housing. In another embodiment, the actuator assemblies each include a rotary inertial mass and the control signals have different duty cycles to provide directional sensations. For power-consumption efficiency, the control signals can be interlaced or pulsed at a different frequency and duty cycle to reduce average power requirements.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 27, 2001
    Date of Patent: March 8, 2005
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Louis B. Rosenberg, David F. Moore, Kenneth M. Martin, Alex S. Goldenberg
  • Publication number: 20040233167
    Abstract: A low-cost haptic feedback device that provides spatially-based sensations such as textures in correlation with a displayed graphical environment. The device includes a housing, a sensor device, and an actuator for applying a force to the user. A local processor reports relative sensor data to the host processor and receives force information from the host processor. The host force information causes a texture sensation to be output by the actuator, the texture sensation providing forces to the user at least approximately spatially correlated with predefined locations in the graphical environment as determined by a local processor. In some embodiments, the local processor can model a position of the cursor while the cursor interacts with the texture field, where the modeled position is used for determining the force output to the user, and the force information from the host can include a gating command to activate or deactivate the texture sensation when the cursor enters or exits the texture field.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 12, 2002
    Publication date: November 25, 2004
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Louis B. Rosenberg, Kenneth M. Martin
  • Patent number: 6816148
    Abstract: An interface device and method for providing enhanced cursor control with force feedback. A force feedback interface device includes a manipulandum, such as a mouse, that is moveable in a local workspace. The device is coupled to a host computer that displays a cursor in a graphical environment, such as a GUI, on a display screen. An interior region and a border region in the local workspace is defined. One mapping of device movement to cursor movement is used for the interior region, and a different mapping is used for the border region. Mapping methods include ballistics, absolute, linear, rate control, and variable absolute. Rate control embodiments can be single axis or dual axis. In one embodiment, when the mouse moves from the interior region to the border region, the mapping providing the greater cursor velocity is used to better conserve device workspace in the direction of travel and to decrease any sense of mapping mode change to the user.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 18, 2001
    Date of Patent: November 9, 2004
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Jeffrey R. Mallett, Dean C. Chang, Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun, Kenneth M. Martin, Jonathan L. Beamer
  • Publication number: 20040145600
    Abstract: Products and processes for providing haptic feedback in a user interface device are disclosed. In one exemplary embodiment, a process comprises defining a first cell, mapping a first location of a matrix with the defined first cell, and mapping a second location of the matrix with the defined first cell. The first cell comprises a first parameter representing a first haptic effect.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 15, 2003
    Publication date: July 29, 2004
    Inventors: Juan Manuel Cruz-Hernandez, Danny Grant, Pedro Gregorio, Neil T. Olien, Adam C. Braun
  • Patent number: 6762745
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for controlling an actuator to provide linear and continuous force output to a user of a force feedback device. To provide continuous and smooth force output in a zero crossover region of operation, two drive signals are used, each causing current to flow in a different direction in the actuator. When a desired output force is in the crossover region, the two drive signals are alternated to cause the output force to quickly switch directions. When the desired force is outside the crossover region, only one drive signal is used to cause output force in one direction. To compensate for a nonlinear output of the actuator, a desired command current is correlated with an approximated point of a characterization curve of the actuator, where the curve includes points determined in a previously performed actuator characterization.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 5, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 13, 2004
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Kollin M. Tierling, Bruce M. Schena
  • Publication number: 20040113932
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for shaping force signals for a force feedback device. A source wave is provided and is defined by a set of control parameters (including a steady state magnitude, a frequency value and a duration value) and modified by a set of impulse parameters (including an impulse magnitude, and a settle time representing a time required for the impulse magnitude to change to the steady-state magnitude). Optionally, application parameters specifying a direction of force signal and trigger parameters specifying activating buttons can also be provided for the source wave. Using a host processor or a local processor, the force signal is formed from the source wave and the sets of control parameters and impulse parameters, where the force signal includes an impulse signal followed by a continual steady-state signal after an expiration of the settle time.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 9, 2003
    Publication date: June 17, 2004
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun
  • Publication number: 20040104924
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for efficient management of memory and force output in a force feedback system including a host computer and a force feedback device. A representation of device memory is maintained on the host computer to allow the host computer knowledge and control over storage and force effects in the device memory. A host cache for force effects is provided to allow almost unlimited numbers of force effects to be created for the device, where any force effects not able to fit in device memory are stored in the host cache. Other aspects of the invention include a playlist stored on the device of force effects being played by the device, and management of force output using relatively small, discrete time intervals.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 14, 2003
    Publication date: June 3, 2004
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Jonathan L. Beamer, Dean C. Chang