Patents by Inventor Paul M Hubel

Paul M Hubel 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).

  • Publication number: 20030059108
    Abstract: A system and method for color correcting electronically captured input images utilizes a correlation between the input images and a set of reference images of different media types to determine the media type of the input images. In an exemplary embodiment, the correlation is performed using a media correlation matrix, which includes media characteristic data from the different media types. The media type information of the input images is used to customize the color correction procedure being performed on the input images. The customization of the color correction procedure ensures that the final images are accurate reproduction of the input images with respect calorimetric or perceptual match.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 21, 2001
    Publication date: March 27, 2003
    Inventor: Paul M. Hubel
  • Publication number: 20030052991
    Abstract: A digital camera simulates the use of fill flash. The camera takes a series of photographs of a scene at various focus distances. The photographs are stored, along with their corresponding focus distances. The photographs are analyzed to determine the distance to objects at various locations of the scene. Regions of a final photograph are selectively adjusted in brightness based on the distance information to simulate the effect that would have resulted had fill flash been used.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 17, 2001
    Publication date: March 20, 2003
    Inventors: Donald J. Stavely, K. Douglas Gennetten, David K. Campbell, Paul M. Hubel
  • Patent number: 6516089
    Abstract: A process and apparatus is described to improve color digital imaging reproduction quality by quickly, accurately and robustly mapping the gamut associated with a color digital image to the gamut of a particular device in a visually pleasing way. The improvement in appearance of the in-gamut reproduction is based on using calculations similar to those used by the human visual system, namely spatial comparisons. The new approach synthesizes a new reproduction image based on spatial comparisons rather than pixel matches. These spatial comparisons are made first at large spatial separations (or smallest multi-resolution image) with the output interpolated to make the old for the next smaller spatial-separation image (multi-resolution image). Ratio, product, reset, average, resize calculations are made to calculate old intermediate image at this spatial separation (image size). The process continues until spatial resolution equals 1.0 (full resolution).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 30, 1999
    Date of Patent: February 4, 2003
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: John J. McCann, Paul M. Hubel
  • Patent number: 6515275
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for determining the illuminant type in a digital image. A photo sensor that has an array of photo-cells that detect non-visible light, embedded in the array of photo-cells that detect only visible light is disclosed. Using the visible light photo-cells in conjunction with the non-visible photocells, the type of illuminant for the scene can be determined.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 24, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 4, 2003
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Susan Hunter, Paul M Hubel
  • Patent number: 6411331
    Abstract: A digital camera includes a lens and a plurality of color filters adjacent the lens. An array of detectors such as CCDs each receive, through the lens and a corresponding one of the color filters, light reflected from a scene. Each detector outputs a signal representative of an amount of light it receives. Circuitry is connected to the array for processing the signals from the detectors and generating a set of digital image data including a chromaticity value and a luminance value of a plurality of pixels representing an uncorrected image of the scene. A control circuit maps a two-dimensional representation of the digital image data into a two-dimensional representation of a set of reference image data and adjusts selected ones of the values of the set of digital image data in accordance with a predetermined transform to white balance the uncorrected image of the scene and produce a modified set of digital image data representing a corrected image of the scene.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 1997
    Date of Patent: June 25, 2002
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Cindy Y. Sansom-Wai, Kirt A. Winter, Paul M. Hubel
  • Patent number: 6379022
    Abstract: An auxiliary illuminating device that has an adjustable color temperature. The color temperature is adjusted by varying the light output at least two independently adjustable light sources. The light source is an array of at least 2 colors. The light source typically uses at least one set of LED's.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 25, 2000
    Date of Patent: April 30, 2002
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Frederic C Amerson, Paul M Hubel, Ricardo J Motta
  • Patent number: 6373591
    Abstract: The present invention is a system that coordinates the printing of a page of photos that match the layout of a pre-existing matte. The matte layout can be created from a physical matte. When creating an electronic layout or template from a physical matte, a digital image of the matte and a reference target is created. The template can then be created by using the relationship in the digital image between the image of the reference target and the image of the physical matte.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 26, 2000
    Date of Patent: April 16, 2002
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Mark D Seaman, K Douglas Gennetten, Paul M Hubel
  • Patent number: 6038339
    Abstract: Color digital imaging quality is improved by quickly, accurately and robustly estimating illuminant information associated with a color digital image to correct color of the image based on the illuminant. A "correlation matrix memory" or "associative matrix memory" is used to achieve identical results to the Color in Perspective method, and to improve it by adding Bayesian or other correlation statistics. The new method is insensitive to aperture colors and provides an effective framework on top of estimation. It will effortlessly return the maximum likelihood answer. A correlation matrix memory is built to correlate the data from any picture image to reference images under a range of illuminants. When a camera, scanner, or the like, produces a picture image, the data is converted to chromaticity and a vector is created corresponding to the values existing in the scene. This vector is multiplied by each column in the correlation matrix giving a new matrix.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 1997
    Date of Patent: March 14, 2000
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Paul M. Hubel, Graham Finlayson
  • Patent number: 5773814
    Abstract: A sensor assembly and an optical image color scanner using the sensor assembly. The sensor assembly is of the type having three separate rows of optical sensors. Two of the three sensor rows have color filters and one is unfiltered (receptive to white light). For gray scale scanning, only the unfiltered (white) sensor row is used, thereby maximizing the speed of gray scale scanning. For color scanning, three color values are computed as a linear transformation of values from the two filtered and one unfiltered values. The linear transformation may be as simple as subtracting signals from the two filtered sensor rows from the signal from the unfiltered (white) sensor row. For color scanning, memory buffers are required for two of the three sensor output signals. For highest accuracy in color scanning, the exposure time for the white sensor row is reduced relative to the exposure time for the two filtered sensor rows.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 22, 1995
    Date of Patent: June 30, 1998
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Wayne G. Phillips, Kenneth D. Gennetten, Paul M. Hubel, David D. Bohn
  • Patent number: 5525866
    Abstract: A broadband line source that is directional, rugged, compact, spatially and temporally uniform, stable, without the need for warmup, and relatively easy to implement. The source can be in single-color or multi-color, and it can be used, for example, in a scanner. In one embodiment, the line source includes a first thin-film electroluminescent stack with at least a bottom electrode, a top electrode, and a first active film between the two electrodes. The active film generates radiation in an area that has a width and a length, with the length being larger than the width. The length of the area sets the length of the line radiation, which is substantially homogenous along the line. In another embodiment, three of such stacks are encapsulated through thin-film processes by a cap, which sits on a substrate. The cap has one side surface that is more transmissive to radiation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 6, 1995
    Date of Patent: June 11, 1996
    Inventors: Gerd O. Mueller, Regina B. Mueller-Mach, Kent Vincent, Paul M. Hubel