Inventor · Beer Sheva, IL

Mark Kliger

18Patents
7h-index
29Co-inventors
62Inventor score

Filing activity: May 14, 2010 → Apr 17, 2023

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US8512240B1 System and method for pain monitoring using a multidimensional analysis of physiological signals Human Necessities 48 Active
US10373380B2 3-dimensional scene analysis for augmented reality operations Physics 25 Active
US10573018B2 Three dimensional scene reconstruction based on contextual analysis Electricity 14 Active
US9501716B2 Labeling component parts of objects and detecting component properties in imaging data Physics 9 Active
US10452789B2 Efficient packing of objects Physics 9 Active
US9911219B2 Detection, tracking, and pose estimation of an articulated body Physics 8 Active
US9747717B2 Iterative closest point technique based on a solution of inverse kinematics problem Physics 7 Active
US10743778B2 System and method for pain monitoring using a multidimensional analysis of physiological signals Human Necessities 7 Active
US10685446B2 Method and system of recurrent semantic segmentation for image processing Physics 6 Active
US9498138B2 System and method for pain monitoring using a multidimensional analysis of physiological signals Human Necessities 4 Active
US11783542B1 Multi-view three-dimensional mesh generation Electricity 1 Active
US10643382B2 Application of convolutional neural networks to object meshes Physics 0 Active
US11861944B1 System for synchronizing video output based on detected behavior Electricity 0 Active
US10229542B2 3-dimensional scene analysis for augmented reality operations General 0 Revoked
US11771863B1 Interface for guided meditation based on user interactions Human Necessities 0 Active
US11259708B2 System and method for pain monitoring using a multidimensional analysis of physiological signals Human Necessities 0 Active
US12346500B1 EMG speech signal detection Physics 0 Active
US12067806B2 System for correcting user movement Physics 0 Active

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