Inventor · Chapel Hill, NC, US

David M. Blaker

21Patents
11h-index
20Co-inventors
75Inventor score

Filing activity: Apr 2, 1984 → May 31, 2007

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6066096A Imaging probes and catheters for volumetric intraluminal ultrasound imaging and related systems Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 221 Expired
US5550870A Viterbi processor Electricity 159 Expired
US5546807A High speed volumetric ultrasound imaging system Physics 113 Expired
US5471500A Soft symbol decoding Electricity 79 Expired
US7685861B2 Method and apparatus for calibrating an ultrasonic sensing system used to detect moving objects Physics 32 Active
US4581636A Scan conversion apparatus and method Physics 20 Expired
US5724390A MLSE before derotation and after derotation Electricity 13 Expired
US7513160B2 Digital pulsed phase locked loop Physics 12 Active
US5537445A Variable length tracebacks Electricity 12 Expired
US5425055A Digital radio modulator Electricity 12 Expired
US5533065A Decreasing length tracebacks Electricity 11 Expired
US5490178A Power and time saving initial tracebacks Electricity 11 Expired
US7894874B2 Method and apparatus for enhancing the detecting and tracking of moving objects using ultrasound Physics 11 Active
US5454014A Digital signal processor Electricity 10 Expired
US5465275A Efficient utilization of present state/next state registers Electricity 9 Expired
US5748650A Digital processor with viterbi process Electricity 9 Expired
US6820105B2 Accelerated montgomery exponentiation using plural multipliers Electricity 9 Expired
US5559837A Efficient utilization of present state/next state registers Electricity 8 Expired
US6691143B2 Accelerated montgomery multiplication using plural multipliers Electricity 8 Expired
US8189591B2 Methods, systems and computer program products for packet ordering for parallel packet transform processing Electricity 3 Active
US5513220A Digital receiver with minimum cost index register Electricity 1 Expired

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