Patents Assigned to SportVision, Inc.
  • Patent number: 6466275
    Abstract: A system is disclosed that can be used to enhance a video of an event. Sensors are used at the event to acquire information. For example, the system can include pan, tilt and zoom sensors to acquire camera view information. This information can be added to the video signal from a camera (e.g. in the vertical blanking interval) or otherwise transmitted to a central studio. At the studio, the sensor information is used to enhance the video for broadcast. Example enhancements include drawing lines or other shapes in the video, adding advertisements to the video or adding other graphics to the video.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 16, 1999
    Date of Patent: October 15, 2002
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Stanley K. Honey, Richard H. Cavallaro, Jerry N. Gepner, James R. Gloudemans, Marvin S. White
  • Patent number: 6456232
    Abstract: A system is disclosed that can determine the speed of a golf club or golf ball, and report that speed in a format suitable for use on a television broadcast, a radio broadcast, the Internet or another medium. In one embodiment, the system includes a set of radars pointed toward the golf ball. Data from the radars is collected and sent to a computer which can determine the speed of the club during a swing, the speed of the ball after being hit, the angle of the path of the ball and/or other related statistics.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 22, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 24, 2002
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Kenneth A. Milnes, Marvin S. White, Richard H. Cavallaro, Stanley K. Honey, Fred Judson Heinzmann
  • Patent number: 6304665
    Abstract: A system is disclosed that can determine the distance a baseball would have traveled after being hit if its path was not interrupted. Thus, when a player hits a home run and the ball collides with an obstruction such as the seating area of a stadium or a wall, the present invention can determine how far the ball would have traveled had the ball not hit the stadium or the wall. The present invention can also be used to determine information about the path of objects other than a baseball.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 1, 1999
    Date of Patent: October 16, 2001
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Richard H. Cavallaro, James R. Gloudemans, Stanley K. Honey, Terence J. O'Brien, Alan C. Phillips, William F. Squadron, Marvin S. White
  • Patent number: 6292130
    Abstract: A system is disclosed that can determine the speed of an object and report that speed in a format suitable for use on a television broadcast, a radio broadcast, the Internet or another medium. One example of a suitable use for the present invention includes determining the speed that a baseball player swings a bat. Another use of the present invention is to measure the speed of a moving ball. In one embodiment, the system includes a set of radars positioned behind and pointed toward the batter. Data from all of the radars is collected and sent to a computer which can determine the start of a pitch, when a ball was hit, the speed of the ball and the speed of the bat.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 9, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 18, 2001
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Richard H. Cavallaro, Fred Judson Heinzmann, Stanley K. Honey, Kenneth A. Milnes, Marvin S. White
  • Patent number: 6266100
    Abstract: A three-dimensional model is created to represent an environment to be captured on video. A camera is fitted with pan, tilt and/or zoom sensors. An operator selects a location in the environment. The three-dimensional model is used to determine the three-dimensional coordinates of the location selected by the operator. Information from the pan, tilt and/or zoom sensors is used to transform the three-dimensional coordinates to a two-dimensional position in the video from the camera. Using the two-dimensional position of the video, a graphic is properly added to the video such that the graphic appears to be at the selected location in the environment.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 24, 1998
    Date of Patent: July 24, 2001
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: James R. Gloudemans, Richard H. Cavallaro, Jerry N. Gepner, Stanley K. Honey, Walter Hsiao, Terence J. O'Brien, Marvin S. White
  • Publication number: 20010005218
    Abstract: A three-dimensional model is created to represent an environment to be captured on video. A camera is fitted with pan, tilt and/or zoom sensors. An operator selects a location in the environment. The three-dimensional model is used to determine the three-dimensional coordinates of the location selected by the operator. Information from the pan, tilt and/or zoom sensors is used to transform the three-dimensional coordinates to a two-dimensional position in the video from the camera. Using the two-dimensional position of the video, a graphic is properly added to the video such that the graphic appears to be at the selected location in the environment.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 26, 2001
    Publication date: June 28, 2001
    Applicant: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: James R. Gloudemans, Richard H. Cavallaro, Jerry N. Gepner, Stanley K. Honey, Walter Hsiao, Terence J. O'Brien, Marvin S. White
  • Patent number: 6229550
    Abstract: A graphic and video are blended by controlling the relative transparency of corresponding pixels in the graphic and the video through the use of blending coefficients. One example of a blending coefficient is an alpha signal used in conjunction with a keyer. The value of a blending coefficient for a pixel in the graphic is based on the luminance and chrominance characteristics of a neighborhood of pixels in the video. Inclusions and exclusions are set up which define how the neighborhood of pixels is used to create or change a particular blending characteristic.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 24, 1998
    Date of Patent: May 8, 2001
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: James R. Gloudemans, Richard H. Cavallaro, Stanley K. Honey, Marvin S. White
  • Patent number: 6167356
    Abstract: A system is disclosed that can measure the vertical height and/or the hang time of a jump. The system includes an acceleration detector, a controller, a display, a power source and a case that houses the components in a manner that allows the device to be worn or held by a person or object. The acceleration detector is used to determine the start of a jump and the end of a jump. Based on the time elapsed between the start of the jump and the end of the jump, the controller can determine the vertical height of the jump and/or the hang time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 1999
    Date of Patent: December 26, 2000
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: William F. Squadron, Richard H. Cavallaro, Stanley K. Honey, Nicholas R. Kalayjian, Terence J. O'Brien, Marvin S. White
  • Patent number: 6133946
    Abstract: A system determines the vertical position of an object and report that vertical position in a format suitable for use on a television broadcast, a radio broadcast, the Internet or another medium. One example of a suitable use for the system includes determining the height that a basketball player jumped and adding a graphic to a television broadcast that displays the determined height. The system includes two or more cameras that capture a video image of the object being measured. The object's position in the video images is determined and is used to find the three dimensional location of the object. The three dimensional location includes a height coordinate. In some cases, the height coordinate is the desired vertical position. In other cases, the height or size of the object may be subtracted from the height coordinate to determined the vertical position.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 11, 1998
    Date of Patent: October 17, 2000
    Assignee: Sportvision, Inc.
    Inventors: Richard H. Cavallaro, Jerry N. Gepner, James R. Gloudemans, Stanley K. Honey, William F. Squadron, Marvin S. White