Patents by Inventor Gregory W. Liddell

Gregory W. Liddell 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: 7907719
    Abstract: A method of designing an interface system that allows users to map the representation of their task directly to the interface. There are three major phases to the Customer-Centric Approach to Interface Design (C-CAID). End-users' tasks are categorized to determine the frequency of reasons or tasks of why users interact with a particular system. These reasons and their relative frequencies are used to design interface options that emphasize the user's task categories. Finally, the customer-centric interface designs are evaluated and compared with existing system interfaces using usability tests with actual users performing the tasks. The results from usability tests are used to pinpoint the task-option combinations that do not work well and which should be revised. Benefits of this customer-centric design are improved systems performance and increased user satisfaction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 21, 2006
    Date of Patent: March 15, 2011
    Assignee: AT&T Labs, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert R. Bushey, Gregory W. Liddell, John M. Martin, Theodore Pasquale
  • Patent number: 7076049
    Abstract: A method is provided for designing an interface system. The method includes receiving a call from a customer at a call center, and logging a reason the customer is calling the call center. Subsequently, reasons from multiple customers are collected and categorized into task categories to be performed by the interface system. Menu options can then be designed based upon the task categories. The menu options include some of the language the customers used to express the reason for calling the call center. Performance of the interface system is evaluated by using cumulative response time (CRT), which is a total time a user interfaces with the system, and routing accuracy. The routing accuracy accounts for whether the user successfully navigated the interface system to a correct destination, whether the user navigated to an incorrect destination, and whether the user did not navigate to any destination.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 2, 2004
    Date of Patent: July 11, 2006
    Assignee: SBC Technology Resources, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert R. Bushey, Gregory W. Liddell, John M. Martin, Theodore Pasquale
  • Publication number: 20040240635
    Abstract: A method is provided for designing an interface system. The method includes receiving a call from a customer at a call center, and logging a reason the customer is calling the call center. Subsequently, reasons from multiple customers are collected and categorized into task categories to be performed by the interface system. Menu options can then be designed based upon the task categories. The menu options include some of the language the customers used to express the reason for calling the call center. Performance of the interface system is evaluated by using cumulative response time (CRT), which is a total time a user interfaces with the system, and routing accuracy. The routing accuracy accounts for whether the user successfully navigated the interface system to a correct destination, whether the user navigated to an incorrect destination, and whether the user did not navigate to any destination.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 2, 2004
    Publication date: December 2, 2004
    Applicant: SBC Technology Resources, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert R. Bushey, Gregory W. Liddell, John M. Martin, Theodore Pasquale
  • Patent number: 6778643
    Abstract: A method of designing an interface system that allows users to map the representation of their task directly to the interface. There are three major phases to the Customer-Centric Approach to Interface Design (C-CAID). End-users' tasks are categorized to determine the frequency of reasons or tasks of why users interact with a particular system. These reasons and their relative frequencies are used to design interface options that emphasize the user's task categories. Finally, the customer-centric interface designs are evaluated and compared with existing system interfaces using usability tests with actual users performing the tasks. The results from usability tests are used to pinpoint the task-option combinations that do not work well and which should be revised. Benefits of this customer-centric design are improved systems performance and increased user satisfaction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 21, 2000
    Date of Patent: August 17, 2004
    Assignee: SBC Technology Resources, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert R. Bushey, Gregory W. Liddell, John M. Martin, Theodore Pasquale