Patents by Inventor Louis B. Rosenberg

Louis B. Rosenberg 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: 6342880
    Abstract: A force feedback interface including a haptic accelerator that relieves the computational burden associated with force feedback generation from a force feedback processor. The force feedback processor is preferably a device microprocessor included in the interface device and separate from a controlling host computer for determining forces to be output. The haptic accelerator quickly determines velocity and/or acceleration information describing motion of a user manipulatable object from raw position data received from sensors of the interface device and representing the position of the user object. The velocity and/or acceleration data is used by the force feedback processor in the determination of forces to be output on the user object.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 6, 1999
    Date of Patent: January 29, 2002
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Christopher J. Hasser, Bruce M. Schena, Mike D. Levin
  • Publication number: 20020003528
    Abstract: A mouse interface device and method for providing enhanced cursor control and indexing cursor control with force feedback. A force feedback interface device includes a manipulandum, such as a mouse, that is moveable in a local workspace. The device is coupled to a host computer that displays a cursor in a graphical environment, such as a GUI, on a display screen. A cursor position in the display frame is reported to the host computer derived from a reference position of the mouse in the local frame, and the host displays the cursor; for example, the cursor position may be scaled by a ballistics algorithm based on mouse velocity to allow fine positioning or coarse motion of the cursor. A force is output on the mouse based on interactions in the GUI, the force being determined based on mouse reference data or cursor ballistic data, depending on the type of force, to reduce distortion between visual and force outputs. Assistive forces can alternatively be output to achieve the enhanced cursor control.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 21, 2001
    Publication date: January 10, 2002
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Jonathan L. Beamer, Adam C. Braun, Dean C. Chang
  • Publication number: 20010045941
    Abstract: A force feedback interface including a haptic accelerator that relieves the computational burden associated with force feedback generation from a force feedback processor. The force feedback processor is preferably a device microprocessor included in the interface device and separate from a controlling host computer for determining forces to be output. The haptic accelerator quickly determines velocity and/or acceleration information describing motion of a user manipulatable object from raw position data received from sensors of the interface device and representing the position of the user object. The velocity and/or acceleration data is used by the force feedback processor in the determination of forces to be output on the user object.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 6, 1999
    Publication date: November 29, 2001
    Inventors: LOUIS B. ROSENBERG, CHRISTOPHER J. HASSER, BRUCE C. SCHENA, MIKE D. LEVIN
  • Patent number: 6323837
    Abstract: An apparatus for interfacing the movement of a shaft with a computer includes a support, a gimbal mechanism having two degrees of freedom, and three electromechanical transducers. When a shaft is engaged with the gimbal mechanism, it can move with three degrees of freedom in a spherical coordinate space, where each degree of freedom is sensed by one of the three transducers. A fourth transducer can be used to sense rotation of the shaft around an axis.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 25, 1999
    Date of Patent: November 27, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventor: Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Publication number: 20010040553
    Abstract: A force feedback interface having isotonic and isometric control capability coupled to a host computer that displays a graphical environment such as a GUI. The interface includes a user manipulatable physical object movable in physical space, such as a mouse or puck. A sensor detects the object's movement and an actuator applies output force on the physical object. A mode selector selects isotonic and isometric control modes of the interface from an input device such as a physical button or from an interaction between graphical objects. Isotonic mode provides input to the host computer based on a position of the physical object and updates a position of a cursor, and force sensations can be applied to the physical object based on movement of the cursor. Isometric mode provides input to the host computer based on an input force applied by the user to the physical object, where the input force is determined from a sensed deviation of the physical object in space.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 10, 2001
    Publication date: November 15, 2001
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventor: Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Patent number: 6317116
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for providing a click surface in a graphical environment, such as a graphical user interface, implemented on a host computer for use with a force feedback interface device. A displayed cursor is controlled by a user-moveable user object, such as a mouse, of the interface device. A click surface is displayed with an associated graphical object, such as a graphical button or an edge of a window, icon, or other object. When the click surface is contacted by the cursor, a force is output opposing movement of the user object in a direction into the click surface and into the graphical object. When the user object has moved to or past a trigger position past the contact with the click surface, a command gesture signal is provided to the host computer indicating that the graphical object has been selected as if a physical input device on the user object, such as a button, has been activated by the user.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 8, 2000
    Date of Patent: November 13, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Dean C. Chang
  • Publication number: 20010035854
    Abstract: A haptic feedback planar touch control used to provide input to a computer. A touch input device includes a planar touch surface that inputs a position signal to a processor of the computer based on a location of user contact on the touch surface. The computer can position a cursor in a displayed graphical environment based at least in part on the position signal, or perform a different function. At least one actuator is also coupled to the touch input device and outputs a force to provide a haptic sensation to the user contacting the touch surface. The touch input device can be a touchpad separate from the computer's display screen, or can be a touch screen. Output haptic sensations on the touch input device can include pulses, vibrations, and spatial textures. The touch input device can include multiple different regions to control different computer functions.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 19, 2000
    Publication date: November 1, 2001
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, James R. Riegel
  • Patent number: 6310605
    Abstract: A force feedback interface and method providing a selective disturbance filter for providing selective reduction or elimination of displayed disturbances associated with output force sensations. A force feedback interface device is connected to a host computer that displays a graphical environment. The interface device includes a user manipulatable object, a sensor for detecting movement of the user object, and an actuator to apply output forces to the user object. A microprocessor outputs controlling force signals to the actuator, receives sensor signals from the sensors and reports locative data to the host computer indicative of the movement of the user object. The host computer updates a position of a displayed user-controlled graphical object in the graphical environment based on the reported data.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 9, 1999
    Date of Patent: October 30, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Dean C. Chang
  • Publication number: 20010030658
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for controlling and providing force feedback using an interface device manipulated by a user. A microprocessor is provided local to the interface device and reads sensor data from sensors that describes the position and/or other information about a user object moved by the user, such as a joystick. The microprocessor controls actuators to provide forces on the user object and provides the sensor data to a host computer that is coupled to the interface device. The host computer sends high level host commands to the local microprocessor, and the microprocessor independently implements a local reflex process based on the high level command to provide force values to the actuators using sensor data and other parameters. A provided host command protocol includes a variety of different types of host commands and associated command parameters.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 22, 2001
    Publication date: October 18, 2001
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun, Mike D. Levin
  • Patent number: 6300936
    Abstract: A force feedback system provides components for use in a force feedback system including a host computer and a force feedback interface device. An architecture for a host computer allows multi-tasking application programs to interface with the force feedback device without conflicts, where a single active application may output forces. A background application also provides force effects to be output and allows a user to assign force effects to graphical objects in a graphical user interface. Force feedback effects and structures are further described, such as events and enclosures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 1997
    Date of Patent: October 9, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Adam C. Braun, Jonathan L. Beamer, Louis B. Rosenberg, Dean C. Chang
  • Patent number: 6300937
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for controlling and providing force feedback using an interface device manipulated by a user. A microprocessor is provided local to the interface device and reads sensor data from sensors that describes the position and/or other information about an object grasped and moved by the user, such as a joystick. The microprocessor provides the sensor data to a host computer that is coupled to the interface device by a communication bus that preferably includes a serial interface. In a “host-controlled” embodiment, the host computer calculates force values using the sensor data and other parameters of a host application program and sends the force values to the local microprocessor, which directly provides the force values to actuators to apply forces to the user object.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 9, 1998
    Date of Patent: October 9, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventor: Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Publication number: 20010026264
    Abstract: Method and apparatus for enhancing inertial tactile feedback in computer interface devices having an increased mass, such as wireless devices having the increased mass due to batteries or other power storage elements. A haptic feedback control device is in communication with a host computer and includes a housing, a sensor device that detects movement of a manipulandum or the housing, an actuator that outputs an inertial force transmitted through said housing to said user by moving an inertial mass, and a component, such as a power storage element coupled to the housing to provide power to the actuator. The component or power storage element is inertially decoupled from the housing to reduce the mass of the haptic feedback device with respect to the inertial mass, thereby allowing stronger haptic sensations to be experienced by the user for a given size of the inertial mass.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 26, 2001
    Publication date: October 4, 2001
    Inventor: Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Publication number: 20010026266
    Abstract: A force feedback mouse interface device connected to a host computer and providing realistic force feedback to a user. The mouse interface device includes a mouse object and a linkage coupled to the mouse that includes a plurality of members rotatably coupled to each other in a planar closed-loop linkage and including two members coupled to ground and rotatable about the same axis. Two actuators, preferably electromagnetic voice coils, provide forces in the two degrees of freedom of the planar workspace of the mouse object. Each of the actuators includes a moveable coil portion integrated with one of the members of the linkage and a magnet portion coupled to the ground surface through which the coil portion moves. The grounded magnet portions of the actuators can be coupled together such that a common flux path between the magnet portions is shared by both magnets.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 5, 2001
    Publication date: October 4, 2001
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Bruce M. Schena, Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Patent number: 6292170
    Abstract: A design interface tool for designing force sensations for use with a host computer and force feedback interface device. A force feedback device is connected to a host computer that displays the interface tool. The user selects a type of force sensation and designs and defines physical characteristics of the selected force sensation using the interface tool. A graphical representation of the characterized force sensation is displayed. The user can include a plurality of force sensations in a compound force sensation, where the compound sensation is graphically displayed to indicate the relative start times and duration of each of the force sensations. The user can also easily adjust the start times and durations of the force sensations using the graphical representation. The force sensations are output to a user manipulandum of a force feedback device to be felt by the user, where the graphical representation is updated in conjunction with the output of the force sensation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 15, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 18, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Dean C. Chang, Louis B. Rosenberg, Jeffrey R. Mallett
  • Patent number: 6292174
    Abstract: An interface device and method for providing enhanced cursor control with force feedback. A force feedback interface device includes a manipulandum, such as a mouse, that is moveable in a local workspace. The device is coupled to a host computer that displays a cursor in a graphical environment, such as a GUI, on a display screen. An interior region and a border region in the local workspace is defined. One mapping of device movement to cursor movement is used for the interior region, and a different mapping is used for the border region. Mapping methods include ballistics, absolute, linear, rate control, and variable absolute. Rate control embodiments can be single axis or dual axis. In one embodiment, when the mouse moves from the interior region to the border region, the mapping providing the greater cursor velocity is used to better conserve device workspace in the direction of travel and to decrease any sense of mapping mode change to the user.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 4, 2000
    Date of Patent: September 18, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Jeffrey R. Mallett, Dean C. Chang, Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun, Kenneth M. Martin, Jonathan L. Beamer
  • Publication number: 20010020937
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for interfacing the motion of a user-manipulable object with an electrical or computer system includes a user object physically contacted by a user. A gimbal mechanism is coupled to the user object, such as a joystick or a medical tool, and provides at least two degrees of freedom to the user object. The gimbal mechanism preferably includes multiple members, at least two of which are formed as a unitary member which provides flex between the selected members. An actuator applies a force along a degree of freedom to the user object in response to electrical signals produced by the computer system. A sensor detects a position of the user object along the degree of freedom and outputs sensor signals to the computer system.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 22, 2000
    Publication date: September 13, 2001
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Bruce M. Schena
  • Patent number: 6288705
    Abstract: An interface device and method for providing indexing cursor control with force feedback. A force feedback interface device includes a manipulandum, such as a mouse, that is moveable in a device workspace. The device is coupled to a host computer that displays a cursor in a graphical environment, such as a GUI, on a display screen, where the cursor is controlled by motion of the manipulandum. A force can be output on the mouse based on interactions in the GUI. Indexing features allow control of the cursor when an offset between local and display frames exists, allow the user to reduce the offset, and reduce disconcerting collisions of the mouse with physical workspace limits. Some indexing features include rate control borders for the device workspace, allowing rate control of a cursor when the mouse gets close to a physical limit; and border scaling allowing acursor to always be moved to a screen edge.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 11, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Jonathan L. Beamer, Adam C. Braun, Dean C. Chang
  • Publication number: 20010019324
    Abstract: A low-cost force feedback interface device for providing low cost force feedback for enhancing interactions and manipulations in a graphical environment provided by a computer. One embodiment provides a mouse movable in a planar workspace and providing output sensor signals representative of that movement. Mouse button movement is detected to send command signals to the host computer, and an actuator coupled to the button applies an output force in the degree of freedom of the button. In a different embodiment, a force feedback pointing device includes a cylindrical member that may be rotated about an axis and translated along that axis to provide sensor signals to control a position of a graphical object such as a cursor. A command sensor detects motion of the cylindrical member perpendicular to the translation, such as when the cylindrical member is pressed down by the user. An actuator applies an output force in the perpendicular degree of freedom of the cylindrical member.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 10, 2001
    Publication date: September 6, 2001
    Applicant: Immersion Corporation
    Inventor: Louis B. Rosenberg
  • Patent number: 6285351
    Abstract: A design interface tool for designing force sensations for use with a host computer and force feedback interface device. A force feedback device is connected to a host computer that displays the interface tool. The user selects a type of force sensation and designs and defines physical characteristics of the selected force sensation using the interface tool. A graphical representation of the characterized force sensation is displayed, which provides a visual demonstration of a feel of the characterized force sensation. The force sensation is output to a user manipulatable object of a force feedback device to be felt by the user, where the graphical representation is updated in conjunction with the output of the force sensation. The user can also associate a sound with the force sensation, such that the sound is output in conjunction with the output of the force sensation. The user can iteratively modify force sensation characteristics and feel the results, as well as synchronize force sensations with sounds.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 2, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 4, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Dean C. Chang, Louis B. Rosenberg, Jeffrey R. Mallett
  • Patent number: 6278439
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for shaping force signals for a force feedback device. A source wave is provided and is defined by a set of control parameters (including a steady state magnitude, a frequency value and a duration value) and modified by a set of impulse parameters (including an impulse magnitude, and a settle time representing a time required for the impulse magnitude to change to the steady-state magnitude). Optionally, application parameters specifying a direction of force signal and trigger parameters specifying activating buttons can also be provided for the source wave. Using a host processor or a local processor, the force signal is formed from the source wave and the sets of control parameters and impulse parameters, where the force signal includes an impulse signal followed by a continual steady-state signal after an expiration of the settle time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 28, 1999
    Date of Patent: August 21, 2001
    Assignee: Immersion Corporation
    Inventors: Louis B. Rosenberg, Adam C. Braun