Patents by Inventor Brian C. Gibson

Brian C. Gibson 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: 5641926
    Abstract: A method for shifting the timbre and/or pitch of an input signal samples the input signal at a first rate and stores the samples in a memory buffer. A digital signal processor resamples the stored input signal at a rate that differs from the first rate at which the input note is originally sampled and stores the resampled input signal in a second memory buffer. A pitch shifter shifts the pitch of the input signal by periodically scaling the resampled input signal by a window function to create an output signal. The rate at which the resampled data is replicated by the window function determines the pitch of the output signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 30, 1996
    Date of Patent: June 24, 1997
    Assignee: IVL Technologis Ltd.
    Inventors: Brian C. Gibson, Christopher M. Jubien, Brian J. Roden
  • Patent number: 5567901
    Abstract: A method for shifting the timbre and/or pitch of an input signal samples the input signal at a first rate and stores the samples in a memory buffer. A digital signal processor resamples the stored input signal at a rate that differs from the first rate at which the input note is originally sampled and stores the resampled input signal in a second memory buffer. A pitch shifter shifts the pitch of the input signal by periodically scaling the resampled input signal by a window function to create an output signal. The rate at which the resampled data is replicated by the window function determines the pitch of the output signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 18, 1995
    Date of Patent: October 22, 1996
    Assignee: IVL Technologies Ltd.
    Inventors: Brian C. Gibson, Christopher M. Jubien, Brian J. Roden
  • Patent number: 5428708
    Abstract: A karaoke type system allows a participant to sing on key with a prerecorded song. A microphone produces an input signal that corresponds to a singer's voice, and a pitch corrector samples the input vocal signal and determines its pitch. The pitch corrector reads a series of codes that are stored with the prerecorded song that indicates the pitch at which the input vocal signal is to be sung in order to be on key with the prerecorded song. The pitch corrector shifts the pitch of the input vocal signal to be on key.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 9, 1992
    Date of Patent: June 27, 1995
    Assignee: IVL Technologies Ltd.
    Inventors: Brian C. Gibson, John P. Bertsch
  • Patent number: 5301259
    Abstract: Disclosed are a method and apparatus for analyzing an input vocal signal to produce a plurality of harmony signals that are combined with the input vocal signal to produce a multivoice signal. The method makes a current estimate of the fundamental frequency of the input vocal signal and determines if the current estimate is the correct estimate of the fundamental frequency. If the current estimate is correct, a reference note is assigned to correspond to the current estimate and a plurality of harmony notes are selected to correspond to the reference note. The method then generates a plurality of harmony signals by scaling the input vocal signal with a piecewise linear approximation of a Hanning window to extract a portion of the input vocal signal and by replicating the extracted portion at a plurality of rates equal to the fundamental frequencies of each of the harmony notes. The plurality of harmony signals and the input vocal signal are combined to produce the multivoice signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 22, 1993
    Date of Patent: April 5, 1994
    Assignee: IVL Technologies Ltd.
    Inventors: Brian C. Gibson, John P. Bertsch
  • Patent number: 5231671
    Abstract: Disclosed are a method and apparatus for analyzing an input vocal signal to produce a plurality of harmony signals that are combined with the input vocal signal to produce a multivoice signal. The method makes a current estimate of the fundamental frequency of the input vocal signal and determines if the current estimate is the correct estimate of the fundamental frequency. If the current estimate is correct, a reference note is assigned to correspond to the current estimate and a plurality of harmony notes are selected to correspond to the reference note. The method then generates a plurality of harmony signals by scaling the input vocal signal with a piecewise linear approximation of a Hanning window to extract a portion of the input vocal signal and by replicating the extracted portion at a plurality of rates equal to the fundamental frequencies of each of the harmony notes. The plurality of harmony signals and the input vocal signal are combined to produce the multivoice signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 21, 1991
    Date of Patent: July 27, 1993
    Assignee: IVL Technologies, Ltd.
    Inventors: Brian C. Gibson, John P. Bertsch
  • Patent number: 4688464
    Abstract: A pitch detector is disclosed that automatically recognizes the pitch of musical notes quickly and outputs the pitch information in a variety of formats. The detector employs a microprocessor that samples the signal from a musical instrument or voice at regular intervals using an analog-to-digital converter and then utilizes both amplitude and time information from the waveform to determine the fundamental period of the note, while rejecting the harmonic components. The microprocessor analyzes the waveform looking for peaks that are approximately equal in amplitude separated by opposite polarity peaks. The time intervals between the peaks must be approximately equal too. Timing information is measured using more than one point on the waveform to avoid inaccuracies caused by temporary distortions of the waveform. The timing points are chosen at points where the slope of the waveform is high for substantially optimal accuracy.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 16, 1986
    Date of Patent: August 25, 1987
    Assignee: IVL Technologies Ltd.
    Inventors: Brian C. Gibson, George J. Spark