Inventor · Frisco, TX, US

Matthew Cameron Clark

15Patents
4h-index
15Co-inventors
53Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 29, 2010 → Nov 18, 2022

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US8675059B2 System and method for using a video monitoring system to prevent and manage decubitus ulcers in patients Physics 40 Active
US10387720B2 System and method for using a video monitoring system to prevent and manage decubitus ulcers in patients Physics 21 Active
US9833201B2 Monitoring a physiological parameter of a cyclist Human Necessities 13 Active
US10645346B2 Patient video monitoring systems and methods having detection algorithm recovery from changes in illumination Electricity 4 Active
US9794523B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 2 Active
US9635320B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 1 Active
US10630941B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 1 Active
US10044989B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 1 Active
US12088966B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 0 Active
US11032522B2 Patient video monitoring systems and methods having detection algorithm recovery from changes in illumination Electricity 0 Active
US12112566B2 System and method for using a video monitoring system to prevent and manage decubitus ulcers in patients Physics 0 Active
US11057589B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 0 Active
US11477416B2 Patient video monitoring systems and methods having detection algorithm recovery from changes in illumination Electricity 0 Active
US11553161B2 Electronic patient sitter management system and method for implementing Physics 0 Active
US12047713B2 Patient video monitoring systems and methods having detection algorithm recovery from changes in illumination Electricity 0 Active

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