Patents by Inventor William L. Verplank
William L. Verplank 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).
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Patent number: 8154511Abstract: A computerized interactor system uses physical, three-dimensional objects as metaphors for input of user intent to a computer system. When one or more interactors are engaged with a detection field, the detection field reads an identifier associated with the object and communicates the identifier to a computer system. The computer system determines the meaning of the interactor based upon its identifier and upon a semantic context in which the computer system is operating. The interactors can be used to control other systems, such as audio systems, or it can be used as intuitive inputs into a computer system for such purposes as marking events in a temporal flow. The interactors, as a minimum, communicate their identity, but may also be more sophisticated in that they can communicate additional processed or unprocessed data, i.e. they can include their own data processors.Type: GrantFiled: February 23, 2009Date of Patent: April 10, 2012Assignee: Vintell Applications NY, LLCInventors: Jonathan R. Cohen, Debby Hindus, Bonnie M. Johnson, Andrew J. Singer, Lisa J. Stifelman, William L. Verplank, Scott C. Wallters, M. Margaret Withgott
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Publication number: 20090174654Abstract: A computerized interactor system uses physical, three-dimensional objects as metaphors for input of user intent to a computer system. When one or more interactors are engaged with a detection field, the detection field reads an identifier associated with the object and communicates the identifier to a computer system. The computer system determines the meaning of the interactor based upon its identifier and upon a semantic context in which the computer system is operating. The interactors can be used to control other systems, such as audio systems, or it can be used as intuitive inputs into a computer system for such purposes as marking events in a temporal flow. The interactors, as a minimum, communicate their identity, but may also be more sophisticated in that they can communicate additional processed or unprocessed data, i.e. they can include their own data processors.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 23, 2009Publication date: July 9, 2009Inventors: Jonathan R. Cohen, Debby Hindus, Bonnie M. Johnson, Andrew J. Singer, Lisa J. Stifelman, William L. Verplank, Scott C. Wallters, M. Margaret Withgott
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Patent number: 7545359Abstract: A computerized interactor system uses physical, three-dimensional objects as metaphors for input of user intent to a computer system. When one or more interactors are engaged with a detection field, the detection field reads an identifier associated with the object and communicates the identifier to a computer system. The computer system determines the meaning of the interactor based upon its identifier and upon a semantic context in which the computer system is operating. The interactors can be used to control other systems, such as audio systems, or it can be used as intuitive inputs into a computer system for such purposes as marking events in a temporal flow. The interactors, as a minimum, communicate their identity, but may also be more sophisticated in that they can communicate additional processed or unprocessed data, i.e. they can include their own data processors.Type: GrantFiled: February 18, 2005Date of Patent: June 9, 2009Assignee: Vulcan Patents LLCInventors: Jonathan R. Cohen, Debby Hindus, Bonnie M. Johnson, Andrew J. Singer, Lisa J. Stifelman, William L. Verplank, Scott C. Wallters, M. Margaret Withgott
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Patent number: 7191401Abstract: A pushbutton user interface enables a user to preview the effect of activating a pushbutton of the interface before the pushbutton is activated. The pushbutton user interface can be implemented so that an input (preview input) to the pushbutton that does not produce an activation of the pushbutton is sensed and, in response to the sensed input, a preview is displayed that indicates the effect of activating the pushbutton. The preview input can be sensed using, for example, a force-sensitive resistor, potentiometer or strain gauge. The preview display can include, for example, a visual display, an audio display, a haptic display, or a combination of two or three such displays. The pushbutton user interface can be implemented so that the preview input and an activation input (i.e., an input that produces an activation of the pushbutton) are sensed as a result of an input to the pushbutton along the same axis or along different (e.g., orthogonal) axes.Type: GrantFiled: October 11, 2005Date of Patent: March 13, 2007Assignee: Vulcan Patents LLCInventors: Jayne B. Roderick, Karon E. MacLean, William L. Verplank, Scott S. Snibbe
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Patent number: 7143357Abstract: Collaborative digital media artifact production is disclosed. Included are structured collaborative digital media creation environments intended to enable communities to create full and partial digital media products. Activities such as creating individual identities, browsing identities of other users, creating and viewing digital media artifacts, tracking the development history of a digital media artifact, voting on, rating, and modifying digital media products developed by other users are included. A collaborative digital media creation system is also included for digital media artifact production, including a studio having interfaces for user interaction for community development.Type: GrantFiled: April 4, 2001Date of Patent: November 28, 2006Assignee: Vulcan Portals, Inc.Inventors: Scott S. Snibbe, Baldo Faieta, William L. Verplank, Cy de Groat, Lukas Girling, Annarosa Tomasi
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Patent number: 7119789Abstract: A user can selectively engage some part or all of the haptic display of a haptic interface device to produce an enhanced interaction with an environment with which the user interacts using the haptic interface device. Further, the haptic interface device can be implemented so that the part of the haptic display that is engaged can be engaged to varying degree. The degree of engagement with the haptic display (together with whether part or all of the haptic display is engaged) determines the manner in which the haptic display is experienced by the user. The selective engagement with the haptic display is enabled by adding a haptic clutch model to the underlying haptic model used to produce the haptic display, the haptic clutch model engaging some part or all of the haptic model in response to user input. The addition of a haptic clutch model to the haptic model used to produce a haptic display provides a richer user interaction than is provided by a haptic display produced by the haptic model alone.Type: GrantFiled: January 17, 2003Date of Patent: October 10, 2006Assignee: Vulcan Patents LLCInventors: Robert S. Shaw, Scott S. Snibbe, William L. Verplank, Karon E. MacLean
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Patent number: 7089292Abstract: The invention facilitates browsing of an indexed collection of electronic content by displaying information identifying a current location within the collection of electronic content using a non-visual display (e.g., audio display and/or haptic display). The information identifying the current location can be displayed with variable resolution and the content of the display of the information identifying the current location can be dependent on the resolution. The invention can be used to browse any type of electronic content, including, for example, audio content, visual content, text content or some combination of such content. The invention can be used to browse electronic content that is indexed in any way, such as, for example, electronic content that is indexed (partly or entirely) alphabetically, numerically or by date.Type: GrantFiled: July 27, 2001Date of Patent: August 8, 2006Assignee: Vulcan Patents, LLCInventors: Jayne B. Roderick, William L. Verplank, Scott S. Snibbe
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Patent number: 6976215Abstract: A pushbutton user interface enables a user to preview the effect of activating a pushbutton of the interface before the pushbutton is activated. The pushbutton user interface can be implemented so that an input (preview input) to the pushbutton that does not produce an activation of the pushbutton is sensed and, in response to the sensed input, a preview is displayed that indicates the effect of activating the pushbutton. The preview input can be sensed using, for example, a force-sensitive resistor, potentiometer or strain gauge. The preview display can include, for example, a visual display, an audio display, a haptic display, or a combination of two or three such displays. The pushbutton user interface can be implemented so that the preview input and an activation input (i.e., an input that produces an activation of the pushbutton) are sensed as a result of an input to the pushbutton along the same axis or along different (e.g., orthogonal) axes.Type: GrantFiled: July 27, 2001Date of Patent: December 13, 2005Assignee: Vulcan Patents LLCInventors: Jayne B. Roderick, Karon E. MacLean, William L. Verplank, Scott S. Snibbe
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Patent number: 6965371Abstract: A manual interface combines continuous and discrete control and display capabilities. The manual interface can be embodied by combining a haptic interface providing continuous control and display capabilities with one or more of multiple discrete selectors (such as tagged objects) providing discrete control capabilities. The manual interface can provide finer control and a richer sensory experience than is possible with conventional tagged objects. Further, unlike a conventional haptic interface device, the manual interface can provide easily selectable, multiple interactive possibilities.Type: GrantFiled: January 22, 2003Date of Patent: November 15, 2005Assignee: Vulcan Patents LLCInventors: Karon E. MacLean, Golan Levin, Scott S. Snibbe, William L. Verplank
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Patent number: 6940486Abstract: A computerized interactor system uses physical, three-dimensional objects as metaphors for input of user intent to a computer system. When one or more interactors are engaged with a detection field, the detection field reads an identifier associated with the object and communicates the identifier to a computer system. The computer system determines the meaning of the interactor based upon its identifier and upon a semantic context in which the computer system is operating. The interactors can be used to control other systems, such as audio systems, or it can be used as intuitive inputs into a computer system for such purposes as marking events in a temporal flow. The interactors, as a minimum, communicate their identity, but may also be more sophisticated in that they can communicate additional processed or unprocessed data, i.e. they can include their own data processors.Type: GrantFiled: March 30, 2001Date of Patent: September 6, 2005Assignee: Vulcan Patents LLCInventors: Jonathan R. Cohen, Debby Hindus, Bonnie M. Johnson, Andrew J. Singer, Lisa J. Stifelman, William L. Verplank, Scott C. Wallters, M. Margaret Withgott
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Patent number: 6803924Abstract: A haptic interface device is disclosed. The haptic interface device comprises a haptic display and a resolution input device. The haptic display is configured to provide a haptic sensation to a user in response to an interaction with an environment by the user. The resolution input device is configured to receive from the user an input indicating a resolution desired by the user. The desired resolution defines a desired magnitude of change in the haptic sensation per unit change in the state of one or more aspects of the environment. The haptic display device is configured to use the input to control the haptic sensation provided by the haptic display.Type: GrantFiled: October 28, 2002Date of Patent: October 12, 2004Assignee: Interval Research CorporationInventors: Scott S. Snibbe, Karon E. MacLean, Kimberly H. Johnson, Oliver T. Bayley, William L. Verplank
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Patent number: 6647359Abstract: In a music synthesis system, a scanning apparatus repeatedly scans a physical attribute of a vibrating object at a sequence of points of the vibrating object so as to repeatedly generate corresponding sequences of values. The music synthesis system generates an audio frequency waveform whose shape corresponds to the sequences of values. The vibrating object may be a physical object or a simulated object. The system may include a sensor for receiving user input, and means for mapping the user input into a stimulus signal that is applied to the vibrating object. In a preferred embodiment, the object vibrates and is manipulated by the user at haptic frequencies (0 to 15 hertz), while the sequences of scanned values are cyclically read at an audio frequencies so as to generate an audio frequency waveform whose timbre varies at the haptic frequencies associated with the object's vibration.Type: GrantFiled: July 16, 1999Date of Patent: November 11, 2003Assignee: Interval Research CorporationInventors: William L. Verplank, Max V. Mathews, Robert S. Shaw
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Patent number: 6529183Abstract: A manual interface combines continuous and discrete control and display capabilities. The manual interface can be embodied by combining a haptic interface providing continuous control and display capabilities with one or more of multiple discrete selectors (such as tagged objects) providing discrete control capabilities. The manual interface can provide finer control and a richer sensory experience than is possible with conventional tagged objects. Further, unlike a conventional haptic interface device, the manual interface can provide easily selectable, multiple interactive possibilities.Type: GrantFiled: September 13, 1999Date of Patent: March 4, 2003Assignee: Interval Research Corp.Inventors: Karon E. MacLean, Golan Levin, Scott S. Snibbe, William L. Verplank
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Patent number: 6525711Abstract: A user can selectively engage some part or all of the haptic display of a haptic interface device to produce an enhanced interaction with an environment with which the user interacts using the haptic interface device. Further, the haptic interface device can be implemented so that the part of the haptic display that is engaged can be engaged to varying degree. The degree of engagement with the haptic display (together with whether part or all of the haptic display is engaged) determines the manner in which the haptic display is experienced by the user. The selective engagement with the haptic display is enabled by adding a haptic clutch model to the underlying haptic model used to produce the haptic display, the haptic clutch model engaging some part or all of the haptic model in response to user input. The addition of a haptic clutch model to the haptic model used to produce a haptic display provides a richer user interaction than is provided by a haptic display produced by the haptic model alone.Type: GrantFiled: June 24, 1999Date of Patent: February 25, 2003Assignee: Interval Research Corp.Inventors: Robert S. Shaw, Scott S. Snibbe, William L. Verplank, Karon E. MacLean
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Patent number: 6496200Abstract: A haptic interface device produces a haptic display in response to a user's interaction with an environment with which the haptic interface device is associated. The invention enables the resolution of the haptic display produced by the haptic interface device to be changed by the user. In particular, the invention can be implemented so that the haptic display resolution can be changed (readily) as the user interacts with the environment using the haptic interface device. Thus, the invention can enable a user to interact with a particular environment at different levels of detail (i.e., different resolutions) and, in particular, can enable the user to immediately change from interacting with the environment at one level of detail to interacting with the environment at a different level of detail.Type: GrantFiled: November 2, 1999Date of Patent: December 17, 2002Assignee: Interval Research Corp.Inventors: Scott S. Snibbe, Karon E. MacLean, Kimberly H. Johnson, Oliver T. Bayley, William L. Verplank
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Publication number: 20020126085Abstract: The present invention teaches a variety of methods and systems for providing computer/human interfaces. According to one method, the user interfaces with an electronic device such as a computer system by engaging a sensor with desired regions of an encoded physical medium. the encoded physical medium is preferably chosen to provide intuitive meaning to the user and is thus an improved metaphor for interfacing with the computer system. The sensor may have at least one identification number (ID) providing information such as user identity, sensor type, access type, or language type. The sensor can transmit the certain decoded information together with the at least one ID to the computer system.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 30, 2001Publication date: September 12, 2002Inventors: Jonathan R. Cohen, Debby Hindus, Bonnie M. Johnson, Andrew J. Singer, Lisa J. Stifelman, William L. Verplank, Scott C. Wallters, M. Margaret Withgott
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Patent number: 6262711Abstract: A computerized interactor system uses physical, three-dimensional objects as metaphors for input of user intent to a computer system. When one or more interactors are engaged with a detection field, the detection field reads an identifier associated with the object and communicates the identifier to a computer system. The computer system determines the meaning of the interactor based upon its identifier and upon a semantic context in which the computer system is operating. The interactors can be used to control other systems, such as audio systems, or it can be used as intuitive inputs into a computer system for such purposes as marking events in a temporal flow. The interactors, as a minimum, communicate their identity, but may also be more sophisticated in that they can communicate additional processed or unprocessed data, i.e. they can include their own data processors.Type: GrantFiled: February 14, 1997Date of Patent: July 17, 2001Assignee: Interval Research CorporationInventors: Jonathan R. Cohen, Debby Hindus, Bonnie M. Johnson, Andrew J. Singer, Lisa J. Stifelman, William L. Verplank, Scott C. Wallters, M. Margaret Withgott
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Patent number: 5295242Abstract: A method and apparatus for displaying the relationship of objects in a factory on a computer system display. A first icon is displayed, the first icon representing a first class of factory objects. A second icon is displayed, the second icon representing a second class of factory objects. A first connector connecting the first icons and second icons is displayed representing the relationship between the first and the second class of factory objects. The first icon is selected, thus displaying a first list of names of all objects comprising the first class of factory objects. Then, a first name from the first list of names is selected, and a second list of names is displayed. The second list of names comprises the names of all objects in the second class of factory objects associated with the object from the first class having the first name.Type: GrantFiled: November 2, 1990Date of Patent: March 15, 1994Assignee: Consilium, Inc.Inventors: Rajesh U. Mashruwala, Richard L. Hess, William L. Verplank
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Patent number: D297243Type: GrantFiled: October 28, 1985Date of Patent: August 16, 1988Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Doris E. Wells-Papanek, William L. Verplank, Norman L. Cox
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Patent number: D298144Type: GrantFiled: December 9, 1985Date of Patent: October 18, 1988Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Wells-Papanek Doris E., William L. Verplank, Norman L. Cox