Patents by Inventor James Wiltshire

James Wiltshire 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: 20050149524
    Abstract: A computer-automated system and method identify text in a first “citing” court case, near a “citing instance” (in which a second “cited” court case is cited), that indicates the reason(s) for citing (RFC). The automated method of designating text, taken from a set of citing documents, as reasons for citing (RFC) that are associated with respective citing instances of a cited document, has steps including: obtaining contexts of the citing instances in the respective citing documents (each context including text that includes the citing instance and text that is near the citing instance), analyzing the content of the contexts, and selecting (from the citing instances' context) text that constitutes the RFC, based on the analyzed content of the contexts. A related computer-automated system and method selects content words that are highly related to the reasons a particular document is cited, and gives them weights that indicate their relative relevance.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2005
    Publication date: July 7, 2005
    Inventors: Timothy Humphrey, Xin Lu, Afsar Parhizgar, Salahuddin Ahmed, James Wiltshire, John Morelock, Joseph Harmon, Spiro Collias, Paul Zhang
  • Publication number: 20050149523
    Abstract: A computer-automated system and method identify text in a first “citing” court case, near a “citing instance” (in which a second “cited” court case is cited), that indicates the reason(s) for citing (RFC). The automated method of designating text, taken from a set of citing documents, as reasons for citing (RFC) that are associated with respective citing instances of a cited document, has steps including: obtaining contexts of the citing instances in the respective citing documents (each context including text that includes the citing instance and text that is near the citing instance), analyzing the content of the contexts, and selecting (from the citing instances' context) text that constitutes the RFC, based on the analyzed content of the contexts. A related computer-automated system and method selects content words that are highly related to the reasons a particular document is cited, and gives them weights that indicate their relative relevance.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2005
    Publication date: July 7, 2005
    Inventors: Timothy Humphrey, Xin Lu, Afsar Parhizgar, Salahuddin Ahmed, James Wiltshire, John Morelock, Joseph Harmon, Spiro Collias, Paul Zhang
  • Publication number: 20050144169
    Abstract: A computer-automated system and method identify text in a first “citing” court case, near a “citing instance” (in which a second “cited” court case is cited), that indicates the reason(s) for citing (RFC). The automated method of designating text, taken from a set of citing documents, as reasons for citing (RFC) that are associated with respective citing instances of a cited document, has steps including: obtaining contexts of the citing instances in the respective citing documents (each context including text that includes the citing instance and text that is near the citing instance), analyzing the content of the contexts, and selecting (from the citing instances' context) text that constitutes the RFC, based on the analyzed content of the contexts. A related computer-automated system and method selects content words that are highly related to the reasons a particular document is cited, and gives them weights that indicate their relative relevance.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2005
    Publication date: June 30, 2005
    Inventors: Timothy Humphrey, Xin Lu, Afsar Parhizgar, Salahuddin Ahmed, James Wiltshire, John Morelock, Joseph Harmon, Spiro Collias, Paul Zhang
  • Publication number: 20050108630
    Abstract: A fact extraction tool set (“FEX”) finds and extracts targeted pieces of information from text using linguistic and pattern matching technologies, and in particular, text annotation and fact extraction. Text annotation tools break a text, such as a document, into its base tokens and annotate those tokens or patterns of tokens with orthographic, syntactic, semantic, pragmatic and other attributes. A user-defined “Annotation Configuration” controls which annotation tools are used in a given application. XML is used as the basis for representing the annotated text. A tag uncrossing tool resolves conflicting (crossed) annotation boundaries in an annotated text to produce well-formed XML from the results of the individual annotators. The fact extraction tool is a pattern matching language which is used to write scripts that find and match patterns of attributes that correspond to targeted pieces of information in the text, and extract that information.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 19, 2003
    Publication date: May 19, 2005
    Inventors: Mark Wasson, James Wiltshire, Donald Loritz, Steve Xu, Shian-Jung Chen, Valentina Templar, Eleni Koutsomitopoulou