Patents by Inventor Carol A. Broverman

Carol A. Broverman 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: 20140039921
    Abstract: Roughly described, a user instantiates protocol elements in a structured clinical trial protocol database and then draws from them in the development of one or more protocol related documents. The system helps the user select tasks to be performed during the study by reference to a historical database of tasks previously associated with similar protocols. The system automatically generates complex content from protocol elements in the database, and can render overlapping sets of protocol elements differently at different locations in the document. The system can automatically provide advisories indicating aspects of the document that still require completion or highlighting other issues that a sponsoring authority deems important for the document type. After all protocol elements are instantiated in the protocol database, it can then be used to drive the operation of most downstream aspects of the study.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 15, 2013
    Publication date: February 6, 2014
    Applicant: MEDIDATA SOLUTIONS, INC.
    Inventors: Carol A. Broverman, Michael Gary Kahn, Christopher Noon, Peter Leonard Abramowitsch
  • Patent number: 8571891
    Abstract: Roughly described, a user instantiates protocol elements in a structured clinical trial protocol database and then draws from them in the development of one or more protocol related documents. The system helps the user select tasks to be performed during the study by reference to a historical database of tasks previously associated with similar protocols. The system automatically generates complex content from protocol elements in the database, and can render overlapping sets of protocol elements differently at different locations in the document. The system can automatically provide advisories indicating aspects of the document that still require completion or highlighting other issues that a sponsoring authority deems important for the document type. After all protocol elements are instantiated in the protocol database, it can then be used to drive the operation of most downstream aspects of the study.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 29, 2013
    Date of Patent: October 29, 2013
    Assignee: Medidata Solutions, Inc.
    Inventors: Carol A. Broverman, Peter Leonard Abramowitsch, Michael Gary Kahn, Christopher Noon
  • Patent number: 8504380
    Abstract: Roughly described, a user instantiates protocol elements in a structured clinical trial protocol database and then draws from them in the development of one or more protocol related documents. The system helps the user select tasks to be performed during the study by reference to a historical database of tasks previously associated with similar protocols. The system automatically generates complex content from protocol elements in the database, and can render overlapping sets of protocol elements differently at different locations in the document. The system can automatically provide advisories indicating aspects of the document that still require completion or highlighting other issues that a sponsoring authority deems important for the document type. Alter all protocol elements are instantiated in the protocol database, it can then be used to drive the operation of most downstream aspects of the study.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 5, 2003
    Date of Patent: August 6, 2013
    Assignee: Medidata Solutions, Inc.
    Inventors: Carol A. Broverman, Michael G. Kahn, Christopher Noon
  • Patent number: 7444293
    Abstract: Structure and methodology for reducing risk of protocol ambiguities that could lead to operational failures in the conduct of clinical trials. Roughly described, an analyst encodes the features of a protocol into a highly structured, formal model created specifically to capture issues that tend to cause operational difficulties. The process forces the analyst to look for specific parameters in the text version of the protocol. The system creates a database of the protocol as encoded, and can display the protocol schema as a graphical network of protocol events and temporal links. In one aspect, the database includes an object class into which an analyst encodes descriptions of operational uncertainties. The system can display the network in graphical-visual form, with a human-perceptible indication of objects that have operational uncertainties associated therewith. Advantageously, the formal protocol model includes slots for encoding temporal constraints among protocol events.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 10, 2001
    Date of Patent: October 28, 2008
    Assignee: FastTrack Systems, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael G. Kahn, Carol A. Broverman, Kelly A. Kingdon
  • Publication number: 20040249664
    Abstract: Roughly described, a user instantiates protocol elements in a structured clinical trial protocol database and then draws from them in the development of one or more protocol related documents. The system helps the user select tasks to be performed during the study by reference to a historical database of tasks previously associated with similar protocols. The system automatically generates complex content from protocol elements m the database, and can render overlapping sets of protocol elements differently at different locations in the document. The system can automatically provide advisories indicating aspects of the document that still require completion or highlighting other issues that a sponsoring authority deems important for the document type. After all protocol elements are instantiated in the protocol database, it can then be used to drive the operation of most downstream aspects of the study.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 5, 2003
    Publication date: December 9, 2004
    Applicant: FastTrack Systems, Inc.
    Inventors: Carol A. Broverman, Peter L. Abramowitsch, Michael G. Kahn, Christopher Noon