Patents by Inventor Steven R. Koch

Steven R. Koch 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: 20030028386
    Abstract: The system and method of the present invention comprises a compressed domain universal transcoder that transcodes a bit stream representing frames of data encoded according to a first compression standard to a bit stream representing frames of data according to a second compression standard. The method includes decoding a bit stream into a first set of parameters compatible with a first compression standard. Next, the first set of parameters are transformed into a second set of parameters compatible with a second compression standard without converting the first set of parameters to an analog or digital waveform representation. Lastly, the second set of parameters are encoded into a bit stream compatible with the second compression standard.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 2, 2001
    Publication date: February 6, 2003
    Inventors: Richard L. Zinser, Steven R. Koch
  • Patent number: 5710781
    Abstract: A method for correcting random errors, and detecting and replacing fading errors in radio frequency (RF) digital transmissions, such as voice transmission. In a Dynamic Bit Allocation Sub-Band Coder (DBASBC), bits corresponding to sub-band energy levels are protected before transmission. If the bit error rate detected for a current speech frame is sufficiently high for a sufficient period of time, the band energies for the speech frame are zeroed thereby effectively muting the speech coder output for that frame. If muting is not required but there still exists a bit error condition detected as a fade, the speech frame is deemed corrupted. As a result, the energies for the bands in the current speech frame are selectively replaced with the band energies from the previous frame (assuming the previous frame band energies are reasonable values). Otherwise, the individual band energies are examined one by one. If the individual band energy requires correction, the band energies are replaced individually.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 2, 1995
    Date of Patent: January 20, 1998
    Assignee: Ericsson Inc.
    Inventors: Richard L. Zinser, Steven R. Koch
  • Patent number: 5138661
    Abstract: A linear predictive codeword excited speech synthesizer performs a voiced/unvoiced decision to determine the type of excitation to be supplied to a synthesis filter. The synthesizer selects the excitation for voiced speech from a codebook, using an analysis-by-synthesis technique in which the transfer function of a linear predictive coefficient synthesis filter closely resembles the gross spectral shape of the input speech signal. By pitch-periodic repetition of the selected codebook vector, a high quality synthetic speech output is generated.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 13, 1990
    Date of Patent: August 11, 1992
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventors: Richard L. Zinser, Steven R. Koch
  • Patent number: 5127053
    Abstract: A method of operating an autocorrelation pitch detector for use in a vocoder overcomes the pitch doubling and tripling problem using a heuristic rather than an analytic approach. The process tracks the times of occurrence of a highest and a second-highest autocorrelation peak. The amplitudes of the highest and the second-highest autocorrelation peaks are compared and, when these peaks are within a predetermined percentage difference in amplitude, the ratio of the time position (IPITCH2) of the second-highest peak to the time position (IPITCH) of the highest peak is checked to determine if that ratio is 1/3, 1/2 or 2/3, within a predetermined error limit .epsilon.. If so and if the ratio is either 1/2 or 1/3, then IPITCH is set equal to IPITCH2 as reepresentative of the pitch period while, if the ratio is 2/3, then IPITCH is divided by three in order to represent the pitch period.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 24, 1990
    Date of Patent: June 30, 1992
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventor: Steven R. Koch
  • Patent number: 5097507
    Abstract: Protection of a digital multi-pulse speech coder from fading pattern bit errors common in a digital mobile radio channel is accomplished with error detection techniques which are simple to implement and require no error correcting codes. A synthetic regeneration algorithm is employed which uses only the perceptually significant bits in the transmitted frame. Separate parity checksums for line spectrum pair frequency data, pitch lag data and pulse amplitude data are added to each frame of speech coder bits in the transmitter. The bits are then transmitted through a mobile environment susceptible to fading that induces bursty error patterns in the stream. At the receiving station, the parity checksum bits and speech coder bits are used to determine if an error has occurred in a particular section of the bit stream. Detected errors are flagged and supplied to the speech decoder. The speech decoder uses the error flags to modify its output signal so as to minimize perceptual artifacts in the output speech.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 22, 1989
    Date of Patent: March 17, 1992
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventors: Richard L. Zinser, Steven R. Koch, Raymond L. Toy
  • Patent number: 5073940
    Abstract: A low-overhead method of protecting multi-pulse speech coders from the effects of severe random or fading pattern bit errors combines a standard error correcting code (convolutional rate 1/2 coding and Viterbi trellis decoding) for protection in random errors with cyclic redundancy code (CRC) error detection for fading errors. Compensation for detected fading errors takes place within the speech coder. Protection is applied only to the perceptually significant bits in the transmitted frame.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 24, 1989
    Date of Patent: December 17, 1991
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventors: Richard L. Zinser, Steven R. Koch, Raymond L. Toy
  • Patent number: 4737953
    Abstract: A method for operating a communication network bridge is disclosed. The bridge receives a message frame from a first network connected thereto and reads the source and destination addresses of the received frame. The bridge determines if the addresses are contained in a source address table maintained thereby and if both addresses are present, discards the frame. The bridge transmits the frame to a second network connected thereto if the source address is not in the table or if the source address but not the destination address is in the table.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 1986
    Date of Patent: April 12, 1988
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventors: Steven R. Koch, Charles R. Stein, William T. Hatfield, Neil R. Shapiro, William C. Hughes
  • Patent number: 4715030
    Abstract: Apparatus for bridging between two local area networks is disclosed. The apparatus has two bridge sides each including means for receiving or transmitting a message frame, controller means for directing an incoming message frame into a memory means shared between the bridge sides or directing a frame out of the memory means for transmission, address reading means for reading an address portion of the incoming frame and processor means for determining frame transmissibility from the address portion as provided by the address reading means. The apparatus is configured such that the processor means determines incoming frame transmissibility substantially concurrent with the controller means directing the incoming frame into the memory means.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 1986
    Date of Patent: December 22, 1987
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventors: Steven R. Koch, Charles R. Stein, William T. Hatfield, Neil R. Shapiro, William C. Hughes
  • Patent number: 4649505
    Abstract: A two-input crosstalk-resistant adaptive noise canceller receives a primary input signal including a desired speech signal portion and an undesired noise signal portion and also receives a reference input signal having a reference noise input portion and a crosstalk speech portion. The canceller has first and second summer means and first and second adaptive filter means. The first summer means provides a canceller output signal which is the difference between the primary input signal and the first adaptive filter output signal. The canceller output signal is applied to the reference input of the second adaptive filter and to one of a pair of error-control inputs of the first adaptive filter. The second error-control input of the first adaptive filter is provided by the signal at the output of the second adaptive filter, which receives a single error-control input signal from the output of the second summer means.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 2, 1984
    Date of Patent: March 10, 1987
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventors: Richard L. Zinser, Jr., Seth D. Silverstein, Steven R. Koch