Zhiping Lin
14Patents
5h-index
14Co-inventors
63Inventor score
Filing activity: Oct 31, 1997 → Dec 8, 2020
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US9295429B2 | Predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 76 | Active |
| US8951193B2 | Method of predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 30 | Active |
| US8668644B2 | Method of predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 27 | Active |
| US8932220B2 | Method of predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 19 | Active |
| US9420957B2 | System and method for predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 17 | Active |
| US10888282B2 | System and method for predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 4 | Active |
| US5999863A | Microcontroller embedded control circuit for model railroads | Human Necessities | 4 | Expired |
| US9795342B2 | System and method for predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 2 | Active |
| US10136861B2 | System and method for predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 1 | Active |
| US8895805B2 | Method for modifying insect resistance of plants by utilizing RNAi technique | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 1 | Active |
| US11083414B2 | System and method for health condition monitoring | Human Necessities | 1 | Active |
| US11210109B2 | Method and system for loading resources | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US11647963B2 | System and method for predicting acute cardiopulmonary events and survivability of a patient | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US6218808A | Micro-peak detection quick charger | Electricity | 0 | Expired |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.