Inventor · Wilton, CT, US

Jan Berman

16Patents
13h-index
5Co-inventors
67Inventor score

Filing activity: Sep 8, 2005 → Apr 22, 2015

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US7417397B2 Automated shade control method and system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 224 Active
US8836263B2 Automated shade control in connection with electrochromic glass Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 141 Active
US8723467B2 Automated shade control in connection with electrochromic glass Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 133 Active
US7977904B2 Automated shade control method and system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 125 Active
US8125172B2 Automated shade control method and system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 60 Active
US9938765B2 Automated shade control system interaction with building management system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 60 Active
US8248014B2 Automated shade control system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 57 Active
US8120292B2 Automated shade control reflectance module Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 51 Active
US8432117B2 Automated shade control system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 46 Active
US8587242B2 Automated shade control system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 44 Active
US9360731B2 Systems and methods for automated control of electrochromic glass Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 32 Active
US8890456B2 Automated shade control system utilizing brightness modeling Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 26 Active
US8525462B2 Automated shade control method and system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 21 Active
US7684022B2 System and method for shade selection using a fabric brightness factor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Active
US8482724B2 System and method for shade selection using a fabric brightness factor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Active
US8319956B2 System and method for shade selection using a fabric brightness factor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Active

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