Greg Spooner
15Patents
11h-index
27Co-inventors
72Inventor score
Filing activity: Jul 22, 1996 → Jul 3, 2018
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US7291140B2 | System and method for low average power dermatologic light treatment device | Human Necessities | 81 | Expired |
| US6096031A | High repetition rate erbium:YAG laser for tissue ablation | Electricity | 68 | Expired |
| US6991644B2 | Method and system for controlled spatially-selective epidermal pigmentation phototherapy with UVA LEDs | Human Necessities | 51 | Expired |
| US7326199B2 | System and method for flexible architecture for dermatologic treatments utilizing multiple light sources | Human Necessities | 34 | Expired |
| US6995336B2 | Method for forming nanoscale features | Performing Operations; Transporting | 34 | Expired |
| US5642370A | High repetition rate erbium; YAG laser for tissue ablation | Electricity | 29 | Expired |
| US7780652B2 | System and method for flexible architecture for dermatologic treatments utilizing multiple light sources | Human Necessities | 28 | Active |
| US6193711A | Rapid pulsed Er:YAG laser | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 27 | Expired |
| US6395000B1 | High repetition rate erbium: YAG laser for tissue ablation | Electricity | 22 | Expired |
| US5644585A | High repetition rate Eribum-YAG laser for tissue ablation | Electricity | 18 | Expired |
| US7703458B2 | Methods and devices for non-ablative laser treatment of dermatologic conditions | Human Necessities | 14 | Active |
| US8474463B2 | Methods and devices for non-ablative laser treatment of dermatologic conditions | Human Necessities | 10 | Active |
| US8870856B2 | Method for heating skin using light to provide tissue treatment | Human Necessities | 9 | Expired |
| US7560658B2 | Method for forming nanoscale features | Performing Operations; Transporting | 1 | Active |
| US11701262B2 | Devices and methods for skin tightening | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.