Inventor · Woodstock, GA, US

Audra Wright

19Patents
10h-index
56Co-inventors
75Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 9, 1999 → Apr 4, 2019

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6217890A Absorbent article which maintains or improves skin health Human Necessities 71 Expired
US6296862A Absorbent article which maintains or improves skin health Human Necessities 58 Expired
US6238379A Absorbent article with increased wet breathability Human Necessities 46 Expired
US6316013A Absorbent article which maintains or improves skin health Human Necessities 40 Expired
US6287286A Absorbent article having a reduced viability of candida albicans Human Necessities 39 Expired
US6503525B1 Absorbent article which maintains or improves skin health Human Necessities 31 Expired
US6482422B1 Absorbent article which maintains or improves skin health Human Necessities 17 Expired
US7195771B1 Water-soluble lotions for paper products Textiles; Paper 15 Expired
US6558363B2 Absorbent article with increased wet breathability Human Necessities 13 Expired
US6733773B1 Paper products treated with oil-in-water emulsions Human Necessities 13 Expired
US6904820B2 Method of using a simulated skin substrate and method for determining material dryness performance Human Necessities 9 Expired
US6931951B2 Mechanical device with simulated skin substrate Human Necessities 9 Expired
US7037112B2 Virtual arm for measurement of humidity, temperature, and water vapor transmission rate in materials Physics 4 Expired
US6826973B2 Heated mechanical arm Human Necessities 3 Expired
US6925874B2 Apparatus for measuring the relative difficulty in donning a glove Human Necessities 3 Expired
US8005655B2 Thermal comfort model having multiple fabric layers Physics 2 Active
US8577650B2 User interface for modeling thermal comfort Physics 2 Active
US7174257B2 Method for measuring the effort in donning a glove Physics 2 Expired
US11590320B2 Two-in-one catheter and signal generating apparatus Human Necessities 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.