Patents by Inventor John E. LaMuth

John E. LaMuth 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: 7236963
    Abstract: The transitional version of the inductive inference affective language analyzer is organized as a tandem nested expert system composed of a transitional language analyzer overseen by a master control unit-expert system that coordinates the transitional interchanges over time. The systematic organization of the transitional power hierarchy permits extreme efficiency in programming of the respective knowledge bases through the principles of inheritance: permitting a precise determination of the motivational level at issue during a given transitional interchange. The preferred mode of operation is the true AI simulation mode, utilizing a sentence generator for formulating responses judged for appropriateness by feedback through the decoding system.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 11, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 26, 2007
    Inventor: John E. LaMuth
  • Patent number: 6587846
    Abstract: A new model of motivational behavior, described as a ten-level metaperspectival hierarchy of ethical terms, serves as the foundation for an ethical simulation of artificial intelligence. This AI system is organized as a tandem, nested expert system, composed of a primary affective language analyzer, overseen by a master control unit-expert system (coordinating the motivational interchanges over real time). The systematic organization of the ethical hierarchy allows for extreme efficiency in the programming of the respective knowledge bases, employing the principles of inheritance for modeling the more abstract levels of the hierarchy: allowing a precise determination of the motivational level at issue during a given verbal interchange (defined as the passive-monitoring mode). An optional active monitoring mode permits the posing of simple yes-or-no questions, allowing for clarification of ambiguous language input.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 18, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 1, 2003
    Inventor: John E. LaMuth