Photoelectric Patents (Class 84/724)
  • Publication number: 20020062728
    Abstract: An array of optical fiber sensors is installed in an automatic player piano for monitoring the hammers, and a data processing system produces music data codes through the analysis on the current hammer positions reported by the optical fiber sensors, wherein each optical fiber sensor has a sensor head separable into a head body and a holder so that an assembling worker fixes the optical fiber to the sensor head by pressing the optical fiber to the head body with the holder.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 29, 2001
    Publication date: May 30, 2002
    Applicant: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Shigeru Muramatsu, Tsutomu Sasaki
  • Patent number: 6229081
    Abstract: An automatic player piano is equipped with a position detecting device for detecting current positions of the black/white keys, and the position detecting device radiates light beams across the trajectories of the black/white keys, wherein the position detecting device stores a variable relation between a relative value of the amount of light and the current positions for determining the current positions so that the position detecting device keeps the reliability of the current positions against aged deterioration.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 14, 1999
    Date of Patent: May 8, 2001
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Tomoyuki Ura, Tsutomu Sasaki
  • Patent number: 6184452
    Abstract: An electric guitar has an electromagnetic resonating unit (3) which is arranged to resonate the strings (2) of the guitar, either individually or together. The resonance of each string is picked up by a pick-up unit (4), and the frequency of resonation of the string is detected and compared with a desired value. A tension adjusting unit (5) adjusts the tension in each string (2) until the frequency of resonance of the string correponds to the desired frequency, in order to tune the guitar to a desired tuning pattern. A control panel (6) on the body (1) of the guitar displays optional tuning patterns which may be selected by a user. Automatic tuning of the guitar may be achieved, without requiring the strings to be plucked manually.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 18, 1999
    Date of Patent: February 6, 2001
    Inventors: Peter Graham Long, Paul Stephen Osborne, Jonathan Edward Ensor, Graham George Cole
  • Patent number: 6175074
    Abstract: A musical apparatus which outputs music under the control of various musical control instructions where the desired musical control instructions are reliably determined by the movement of an object in an operation space, and where the musical control instructions are varied by changing the state of motion of the object in space. The musical apparatus performs musical control instructions whose contents are based on the state of motion of an object in motion within a specified operation space.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 20, 1999
    Date of Patent: January 16, 2001
    Assignee: Roland Kabushiki Kaisha
    Inventors: Shigeru Takahashi, Akira Matsui
  • Patent number: 6153822
    Abstract: A musical apparatus which controls a variety of parameters of musical tones by detecting motion of an object in a space adjacent to the musical apparatus. More specifically, the musical apparatus may comprise a musical tone signal generator which generates a musical tone signal, at least one light source which radiates light beams into a space adjacent to the musical apparatus, at least one light detector which detects at least two light beams reflected from an object in the space and generates a detection value for each of said at least two light beams, a computing element which receives the detection values and generates a synthesized value; and a controller which controls parameters of musical tones based on the synthesized value. For example, the synthesized value may be the sum of the detection values, the difference between the detection values, the ratio between the detection values, or some other relationship between the detection values.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 20, 1999
    Date of Patent: November 28, 2000
    Assignee: Roland Kabushiki Kaisha
    Inventors: Yoshihiro Toba, Shigeru Takahashi
  • Patent number: 5998727
    Abstract: A musical apparatus which controls a variety of parameters of musical tones by detecting motion of an object in a space adjacent to the musical apparatus. More specifically, the musical apparatus may comprise a musical tone signal generator which generates a musical tone signal, at least one light source which radiates light beams into a space adjacent to the musical apparatus, at least one light detector which detects at least two light beams reflected from an object in the space and generates a detection value for each of said at least two light beams, a computing element which receives the detection values and generates a synthesized value; and a controller which controls parameters of musical tones based on the synthesized value. For example, the synthesized value may be the sum of the detection values, the difference between the detection values, the ratio between the detection values, or some other relationship between the detection values.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 10, 1998
    Date of Patent: December 7, 1999
    Assignee: Roland Kabushiki Kaisha
    Inventors: Yoshihiro Toba, Shigeru Takahashi
  • Patent number: 5990409
    Abstract: A musical apparatus which outputs music under the control of various musical control instructions where the desired musical control instructions are reliably determined by the movement of an object in an operation space, and where the musical control instructions are varied by changing the state of motion of the object in space.The musical apparatus performs musical control instructions whose contents are based on the state of motion of an object in motion within a specified operation space.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 22, 1998
    Date of Patent: November 23, 1999
    Assignee: Roland Kabushiki Kaisha
    Inventors: Shigeru Takahashi, Akira Matsui
  • Patent number: 5922984
    Abstract: An electrical simulator of a plectrum instrument, including:a microprocessor (3) which is suitable to convert a chord set up on a keyboard (13), received by means of a standardized signal, into a chord which is identical but is, in terms of fingering and number of strings, of the type obtained on the instrument to be imitated;elements (7,19), equal in number to the strings of the instrument to be imitated, which are suitable to sequentially undergo a change in state caused by the hand of a user (12) who performs a movement that is identical to the one made to obtain the sound of the instrument to be imitated, and are suitable to send, as a consequence of said change, a signal to said microprocessor (3) to transmit said chord to a sound card by means of a standardized signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 13, 1997
    Date of Patent: July 13, 1999
    Assignee: Charlie Lab S.r.l.
    Inventor: Carlo Alberto Paterlini
  • Patent number: 5913260
    Abstract: A system and method for detecting, measuring the intensity of, and determining the location of a deformation of a membrane. In one embodiment, the intensity and location of membrane deformations is used as control input to a sound generation system that simulates the sound of a drum. The disclosed system and method may be capable of responding to distinct simultaneous deformations of the membrane.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 7, 1997
    Date of Patent: June 15, 1999
    Assignee: Creative Technology, Ltd.
    Inventor: Donald F. Buchla
  • Patent number: 5909028
    Abstract: A non-contact type position transducer has a light emitting block for splitting a light beam into two light sub-beams and a light detecting block for receiving one of the light sub-beams and another light sub-beam radiated from another light emitting block, and the light emitting blocks and the light detecting blocks shared between a plurality of non-contact type position transducers make the arrangement of non-contact type position transducers simple.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 20, 1996
    Date of Patent: June 1, 1999
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventor: Jun Yamamoto
  • Patent number: 5880393
    Abstract: An acoustic piano, solenoid-operated key actuators for moving black/white keys in response to a driving signal and an electric system form in combination a keyboard musical instrument, and the electric system previously establishes first relations between key motions and associated hammer motions and second relations between the magnitude of the driving signal and final hammer velocity; the electric system estimates the final hammer velocity and a time delay between a key-on timing and an impact timing on the basis of the first relations for producing pieces of music data information in a recording mode, and tailors the driving signal on the basis of the second relations in a playback mode for exactly reproducing the original performance.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 2, 1997
    Date of Patent: March 9, 1999
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Yasutoshi Kaneko, Kiyoshi Kawamura
  • Patent number: 5811709
    Abstract: An acoustic drum capable of triggering an electronic sound source is provided by a combination of a drum body shell, conventional drum heads held at adjustable tension across open ends of the shell, and a sound-to-electrical transducer mounted within an open space of the interior or exterior shell wall surface. The sound-to-electrical transducer is connected to an audio jack assembly which in turn allows the drum to be connected to conventional downstream electronics. The sound energy attenuating characteristics of the mounting material and the surrounding shell wall prevent the transducer from being falsely triggered by ambient sound exterior to the drum, by sympathetic vibrations of the drum, and resists false triggering due to lightly, inadvertently hitting the drum stand.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 8, 1997
    Date of Patent: September 22, 1998
    Inventor: Alfonso M. Adinolfi
  • Patent number: 5543580
    Abstract: A tone synthesizer, for brass instruments, is equipped with a performance information input device such as a mouthpiece having a contact area sensor for detecting the contact area of the lips, a pressure sensor for detecting the push pressure of the lips, and an aperture sensor for detecting the opening surface of the lips. The tone synthesizer is also equipped with an apparatus indicating the strain of the lips, a tone generator, a blow pressure sensor, and a signal transmission apparatus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 10, 1993
    Date of Patent: August 6, 1996
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventor: Hideyuki Masuda
  • Patent number: 5475214
    Abstract: Movement of a musical instrument in space is employed to modulate its sound output. An electro-optical controller is used to detect the elevation of the instrument relative to the floor and, in turn, a control signal for modulating the sound output is generated.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 20, 1995
    Date of Patent: December 12, 1995
    Assignee: Interactive Light, Inc.
    Inventors: Vincent DeFranco, Oded Zur, Assaf Gurner, Romeo Balina, Douglas H. Schiller, Reza Miremadi
  • Patent number: 5237126
    Abstract: A pick-up apparatus for a string instrument comprising an array of supports for positioning an array of detectors, each of which monitors strings' vibrations and generates electrical signals, each of the supports straddling a string of the stringed instrument. The detectors include a sensor mount, a divergent light source, and first and second optical sensors which receive light simultaneously when the light source is illuminated and generates an electrical analog output signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 16, 1992
    Date of Patent: August 17, 1993
    Assignee: Audio Optics, Inc.
    Inventors: Bradley W. Curtis, Bruce L. Kennedy, Christopher R. Willcox
  • Patent number: 5231488
    Abstract: A system to transfer information from a video screen. A sensor embedded in a suction cup detects an increase in intensity of a synchronizing scan line and an increase in intensity of a data scan line and utilizes the time differential between the two events to determine the location of the increase in intensity of the data scan line. In an alternative embodiment, the intensity increase location may be transferred to an electronic musical instrument where it is analyzed by a microprocessor and the information is used to assign notes to the keys of a keyboard.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 11, 1991
    Date of Patent: July 27, 1993
    Assignee: Franklin N. Eventoff
    Inventors: Bernard K. Mohrbacher, Franklin N. Eventoff
  • Patent number: 5231283
    Abstract: A new, inexpensive and unobtrusive opto-electronic sensor which requires no manual adjustments after installation under the keys of the piano keyboard. Post-installation manual adjustments are unnecessary because a method embodied in a computer program and performed by a microprocessor digitally adjusts the operating ranges of the keys. After electronic adjustment, the opto-electronic sensors are scanned and sampled according to another portion of the method to determine the current key position and velocity. The key position and the velocity determined by the method are then transmitted in a MIDI compatible data stream.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 26, 1990
    Date of Patent: July 27, 1993
    Assignee: Gulbransen, Inc.
    Inventors: David T. Starkey, Anthony G. Williams
  • Patent number: 5214232
    Abstract: An electric guitar has a plurality of strings stretched over a rigid body and a neck, and a vibration detecting unit embedded into the rigid body, and the vibration detecting unit has a plurality of photo emitting elements paired with a plurality of photo detecting elements spaced apart from the associated photo emitting diodes in directions parallel to the associated strings, wherein the photo emitting elements radiate light spots toward the associated strings for causing the reflections to be fallen upon the associated photo detecting elements so that the photo detecting elements produces photo currents without any diffraction of light.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 17, 1991
    Date of Patent: May 25, 1993
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Kenzaburo Iijima, Katsufumi Kondo
  • Patent number: 5206449
    Abstract: A pickup responsive in all planes of vibration of a vibrating element of a musical instrument uses two transducers, each maximally responsive in a different plane of vibration. The transducer signals are dephased with respect to each other in order to reduce and possibly eliminate the additive and substractive tendencies of the common portion of the signals when they are combined to produce the pickup signal. The signals may be dephased using a phase shifting network or device, or by using different types of transducers (i.e.: position-sensing for the first transducer and velocity-sensing for the second transducer) which produce signals which are already dephased and thus only require to be combined in order to produce the claimed response.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 14, 1989
    Date of Patent: April 27, 1993
    Inventor: Richard E. D. McClish
  • Patent number: 5192820
    Abstract: A key striking force sensor suitable for player pianos.This sensor contains a displacement sensor for measuring displacement between the displacement sensor itself and a catcher which rocks together with a hammer. As the positions of the catchers corresponding to the hammer respectively are almost the same, plural of the displacement sensors can be mounted on a common circuit board. Accordingly, mechanical construction thereof is comparatively simpler than that of conventional player pianos.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 28, 1991
    Date of Patent: March 9, 1993
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Kiyoshi Kawamura, Shigeru Muramatsu
  • Patent number: 5189240
    Abstract: A breath controller for musical instruments includes a mouth piece for blowing the air into an air chamber. Blowing the air makes an air pressure increase in the air chamber, thus an elastic member is displaced corresponding to the air pressure. At the same time, the displacement of a reflection surface changes an amount of light to reflect an emitted light from a light-emitting element to a light-receiving element. The light-receiving element then controls a signal corresponding to the amount of light, thus making the signal change to a musical tone signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 31, 1989
    Date of Patent: February 23, 1993
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventor: Susumu Kawashima
  • Patent number: 5164532
    Abstract: The player piano provides a string-striking mechanism including a hammer driven by corresponding one of eighty-eight keys, and a photo sensor is provided in the vicinity of and also positioned to face with the predetermined member of this string-striking mechanism to be rotated responsive to a key-depression. This photo sensor outputs a signal which is varied in response to a distance of the predetermined member therefrom, so that the output thereof may have a peak value. Based on the peak value, first and second output values are respectively calculated, wherein these values corresponding to the predetermined two measuring points arranged between the photo sensor and the predetermined member are outputted from the photo sensor before and after the peak value respectively.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 3, 1991
    Date of Patent: November 17, 1992
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Jun Ishii, Mariko Takahashi
  • Patent number: 5107748
    Abstract: In construction of an electronic musical instrument having plural musical tone controllers such as keys, push buttons and an expression pedal unit, a number of pulses are generated depending on the extent of movement of each controller on output lines whose number is smaller than that of the pulses so generated and musical tone control parameters such as tone volume, tone color and tonal pitch are changed in multi-stage fashion in response to the pulses generated. Generation of musical tones is assured whilst well reflecting delicate change in player's emotion via subtle key touch control.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 14, 1990
    Date of Patent: April 28, 1992
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Shigeru Muramatsu, Keisuke Watanabe, Junichi Mishima
  • Patent number: 5085119
    Abstract: An instrument is structured as a guitar and control-box incorporating electronic circuitry to control an external electronic synthesizer and electronic sampling instruments via a conventional M.I.D.I. system. The instrument is played in the fashion of a guitar with digital signals generated in response to switches activated when a musician plays the instrument in a similar manner to playing a conventional guitar. Boards which are capable of movement with respect to the guitar body or arm together with displacement transducers and high efficiency touch-sensitive switches are used for note selection and to create pitch-bend, note-velocity and tremolo signals. The note and fret touch switches are mounted on fret boards which replace the strings of a conventional guitar. The fret boards also produce pitch bend signals.A plurality of pluckboards initiate note-pluck and enable ergonomic multi-timbre playing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 19, 1990
    Date of Patent: February 4, 1992
    Inventor: John F. Cole
  • Patent number: 5012715
    Abstract: A sensor arrangement for an automatic piano player apparatus is provided. The sensor arrangement includes a plurality of switches which are operatively associated with a rotatable shutter in the hammer system of the automatic piano player. When the hammer system is operated to strike a string of the piano, the cooperation between the rotatable shutter and the switches produces output information which includes the string-striking intensity information and the state of condition information of the damper that is normally in contact with the piano string. With this information, the various play techniques such as staccato, legato, continuous key-striking and the like may be reproduced with great fidelity by the automatic piano player apparatus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 2, 1989
    Date of Patent: May 7, 1991
    Assignee: Kabushiki Kaisha Kawai Gakki Seisakusho
    Inventors: Hiroshi Matsunaga, Hisamitsu Honda, Haruhiko Matsui, Masahiko Akita, Tatsuya Inaba, Tetsusai Kondo, Toshio Oka
  • Patent number: 5012086
    Abstract: An optoelectronic pickup for providing an electrical output signal that is a linear representation of the relative displaced position of a mounted string. A collimated light source enables high contrast shadows of the string to be sensed by a photodetector. It also excludes information about the displaced position of the string in all directions except those along a single axis. The photodetector has a large flat surfaced area providing an output signal throughout the entire normal operating displacement range of the string. The design of the detector system results in a linear relationship between the relative position of the string and the total integrated illumination of the active area of the photodetector and hence the electrical output signal. A dual detector scheme allows the pickup to be immune to stray light and also to noise pickup on the lead wires.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 4, 1989
    Date of Patent: April 30, 1991
    Inventor: Timothy J. Barnard
  • Patent number: 4993308
    Abstract: An air responsive control forms the basis for a mouth-blown device having a series of pipes in side-by-side relation into which the user blows or sucks. Signals are produced to operate apparatus such as a music synthesizer for a typewriter or computer. Each pipe has at least a section of light transmitting material. Inside that section, movable actuator such as a ball moves out of a light path between a light source and a photo-sensitive responder by sucking on or blowing by an operator. When the ball blocks the light path there is now signal to the operated apparatus but when it moves out of the light path there is a signal. Both the light source and the photo-sensitive responder are outside the pipe, thus ensuring that there is no contact with saliva of any directly connected electrical part.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 30, 1989
    Date of Patent: February 19, 1991
    Inventor: Norman A. Villeneuve
  • Patent number: 4974482
    Abstract: An electronic keyboard system according to the present invention has a plurality of key sensor units associated with the keys, respectively, and the key sensor units are paired to form a plurality of sensor pairs to which bidirectional current driving units respectively supplies currents periodically changed in direction for selectively actuating the sensor units, so that the interconnections between the bidirectional current driving units and the sensor units are simplified, thereby decreasing the occupation area in the keyboard system.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 21, 1989
    Date of Patent: December 4, 1990
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventors: Takashi Tamaki, Yasutoshi Kaneko
  • Patent number: 4947726
    Abstract: An electronic musical instrument having (a) a body portion, (b) a plurality of fret members located at predetermined spacings on the body portion, (c) a string stretched over the body portion, (d) an anchoring device installed on the body portion for anchoring one end of the string, (e) a probe located under the string and between the anchoring device and the plural fret members for making a lateral movement responsive to a deviation of the string in a lateral direction, and (f) a string deviation detector connected to the probe for detecting the deviation of the string based on the lateral movement of the probe and producing a detection signal responsive to the deviation of the string.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 31, 1988
    Date of Patent: August 14, 1990
    Assignee: Yamaha Corporation
    Inventor: Youjiro Takabayashi