Patents by Inventor Jun Takayama

Jun Takayama 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: 4394694
    Abstract: An editing system employing a video tape recorder (VTR) of this type in which a rotary magnetic video head is attached to a bi-morph leaf or the like so that the VTR can perform in any one of a plurality of special reproducing modes such as a slow motion mode, fast motion mode or the like without the generation of any guard band noise includes a helical scan VTR, which is adapted to carry out the special reproduction modes and is used for reproducing video signals from an original tape, the helical scan video tape recorder including a time code reader for reading out time code signals recorded on the original tape, a reference time generator, which may be another VTR, for generating a reference time code, a memory for storing certain of the time code signals corresponding to an in-point of the original tape (that is, a starting point for playing information signals recorded on the video tape), a VTR controller for setting the direction and speed of travel of the video tape at the in-point, and a central proce
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 23, 1980
    Date of Patent: July 19, 1983
    Assignee: Sony Corporation
    Inventors: Ichiro Ninomiya, Jun Takayama
  • Patent number: 4282552
    Abstract: A video signal reproducing apparatus capable of reproducing parallel record tracks formed on a tape which are scanned by a rotary head and wherein track address signals are recorded on respective vertical blanking interval sections of the record tracks which can be read out and displayed even though the tape moves at various speeds comprising a detecting means for detecting when said track address signals are not being read out and including shifting means for shifting the relative position of the rotary heads relative to the tape when the output of the detecting means continues longer than a predetermined time so as to assure that the address signals will be read at varying speeds of the tape.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 18, 1979
    Date of Patent: August 4, 1981
    Assignee: Sony Corporation
    Inventors: Katsuichi Tachi, Ichiro Ninomiya, Jun Takayama
  • Patent number: 4041453
    Abstract: A system for handling pulse encoded signals includes several parallel signal paths to carry pulses on which a signal has been encoded. The encoding is based on a predetermined amplitude value, or weight, for each pulse, and each signal path receives all pulses having the same weighting factor. A switching system is provided to switch the signals received on the various paths to different paths in a determinable order at a repetition rate commensurate with the pulse encoding repetition rate. The signals are then transmitted along the signal paths and are then switched back to the original order for pulse decoding. If pulse bits are lost in the second path, an interpolation may be made to provide a reasonable restoration of the signal to minimize the dropout effect.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 1974
    Date of Patent: August 9, 1977
    Assignee: Sony Corporation
    Inventors: Kenkichi Umeda, Shoichi Nakamura, Jun Takayama, Tetsuya Horichi, Yoshikazu Tsuchiya
  • Patent number: 3981006
    Abstract: An amplitude adjustment circuit transmits an analog signal to an analog-to-digital converter. If the resulting digital signal reaches the maximum permissible digital value, a monostable control circuit is triggered to cause the amplitude adjustment circuit to reduce the level of the analog signal a certain amount. If the digital signal again reaches the maximum permissible digital value before the control circuit returns to its stable condition a second monostable circuit is triggered (and the first one is retriggered) to cause the amplitude adjustment circuit to reduce the level of the analog signal another amount. The unstable interval for the second monostable circuit is shorter than for the first, and, in the absence of further triggering, both such circuits return to their stable states in succession. The digital signals are used to reconstruct the analog signal in apparatus similar to the encoding apparatus and including amplitude adjustment apparatus controlled by the amplitude compression signals.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 21, 1974
    Date of Patent: September 14, 1976
    Assignee: Sony Corporation
    Inventors: Jun Takayama, Takenori Sonoda, Shoichi Nakamura
  • Patent number: 3981005
    Abstract: A signal conversion system in which an analog signal of a certain magnitude can be encoded as a digital signal making full use of the available number of bits of an A/D converter. The system includes amplitude adjustment apparatus with an up-down counter actuated by the maximum available binary value of the digital signal to count UP one step and set an amplitude selection circuit to effectively attenuate the amplitude of the analog signal by a predetermined amount. The counter may have more than one memorizable count level to control a corresponding number of amplitude selection levels. The counter counts DOWN when the most significant bit of the digital signal drops from 1 to 0. The invention includes a corresponding analog signal reconstruction circuit except that it includes a D/A converter that produces an analog signal at maximum value that must be attenuated for low-amplitude values.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 21, 1974
    Date of Patent: September 14, 1976
    Assignee: Sony Corporation
    Inventors: Jun Takayama, Takenori Sonoda
  • Patent number: 3968328
    Abstract: In dynamic modulation (D.M.) of non-return-to-zero pulse signals, the only condition under which the D.M. signal would remain in the same state, either 1 or 0, for two consecutive pulse intervals is when the NRZ signal includes the sequence 101. Two sampling signals at the proper clock repetition rate are generated from the D.M. signal by the decoder and are successively used to sample the D.M. signal and to sample the signal resulting from the first sampling. Information of the state of the D.M. signal at the time of the first sampling is retained to be compared with the state of the D.M. signal at a later time, and the state of one of the compared signals is separately compared with the state of a signal between the first-compared signals. If the wrong clock pulses midway between the correct clock pulses are used in making the comparisons, a correction signal will be generated in the last half of the second consecutive pulse interval in which the D.M. signal remains in the same state.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 18, 1974
    Date of Patent: July 6, 1976
    Assignee: Sony Corporation
    Inventors: Yoshikazu Tsuchiya, Takenori Sonoda, Jun Takayama