Inventor · Sunnyvale, CA, US

Daniel L. Ashbrook

15Patents
4h-index
7Co-inventors
42Inventor score

Filing activity: Aug 18, 2011 → Jan 7, 2014

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US9122249B2 Multi-segment wearable accessory Electricity 16 Active
US9888842B2 Medical diagnostic gaze tracker Physics 9 Active
US8718374B2 Method and apparatus for accessing an electronic resource based upon a hand-drawn indicator Physics 6 Active
US10453355B2 Method and apparatus for determining the attentional focus of individuals within a group Physics 4 Active
US9030505B2 Method and apparatus for attracting a user's gaze to information in a non-intrusive manner Physics 1 Active
US9269325B2 Transitioning peripheral notifications to presentation of information Physics 1 Active
US9400551B2 Presentation of a notification based on a user's susceptibility and desired intrusiveness Physics 1 Active
US10013024B2 Method and apparatus for interacting with a head mounted display Physics 0 Active
US10620902B2 Method and apparatus for providing an indication regarding content presented to another user Physics 0 Active
US9304010B2 Methods, apparatuses, and computer program products for providing broadband audio signals associated with navigation instructions Physics 0 Active
US9105163B2 Methods, apparatuses, and computer program products for associating notifications with alert functions of remote devices Electricity 0 Active
US10019221B2 Method and apparatus for concurrently presenting different representations of the same information on multiple displays Electricity 0 Active
US9733714B2 Computing system with command-sense mechanism and method of operation thereof Physics 0 Active
US9069738B2 Method and apparatus for determining representations of abbreviated terms for conveying navigation information Physics 0 Active
US9339726B2 Method and apparatus for modifying the presentation of information based on the visual complexity of environment information Human Necessities 0 Active

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