Inventors list |
Assignees list |
Classification tree browser |
Top 100 Inventors |
Top 100 Assignees |
Ahmad A.
Ahmad A. Abdulkader, Woodinville, WA US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20110007963 | COMBINER FOR IMPROVING HANDWRITING RECOGNITION - Various technologies and techniques are disclosed that improve handwriting recognition operations. Handwritten input is received in training mode and run through several base recognizers to generate several alternate lists. The alternate lists are unioned together into a combined alternate list. If the correct result is in the combined list, each correct/incorrect alternate pair is used to generate training patterns. The weights associated with the alternate pairs are stored. At runtime, the combined alternate list is generated just as training time. The trained comparator-net can be used to compare any two alternates in the combined list. A template matching base recognizer is used with one or more neural network base recognizers to improve recognition operations. The system provides comparator-net and reorder-net processes trained on print and cursive data, and ones that have been trained on cursive-only data. The respective comparator-net and reorder-net processes are used accordingly. | 01-13-2011 |
Ahmad A. Khan, Milpitas, CA US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20090056626 | APPARATUS FOR CYCLICAL DEPOSITING OF THIN FILMS - An apparatus for cyclical depositing of thin films on semiconductor substrates, comprising a process chamber having a gas distribution system with separate paths for process gases and an exhaust system synchronized with operation of valves dosing the process gases into a reaction region of the chamber. | 03-05-2009 |
Ahmad A. Naiini, East Greenwich, RI US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20080305431 | PRETREATMENT COMPOSITIONS - A pretreatment composition of: | 12-11-2008 |
| 20090111050 | Novel Photosensitive Resin Compositions - This disclosure relates to compositions that include (a) at least one polybenzoxazole precursor polymer; and (b) at least one silicon-containing polymer comprising a moiety of Structure (V): | 04-30-2009 |
| 20090197067 | Novel Positive Photosensitive Resin Compositions - The present disclosure relates to compositions that include at least one polybenzoxazole precursor polymer, at least one photoacid generator, and at least one basic compound. Articles, films, and methods related to these compositions are also disclosed. | 08-06-2009 |
Ahmad A. Naiini, Greenwich, RI US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20090004444 | Novel Photosensitive Resin Compositions - A positive-working photosensitive composition containing one or more polybenzoxazole precursor polymers, a diazonaphthoquinone photoactive compound which is the condensation product of a compound containing from 2 to about 9 aromatic hydroxyl groups with a 5-naphthoquinone diazide sulfonyl compound and a 4-naphthoquinone diazide sulfonyl compound, and at least one solvent, and the use of such compositions to form a relief pattern on a substrate. | 01-01-2009 |
Ahmad A. Salaimeh, Lexington, KY US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20100311109 | NON-CONTACT METHOD FOR QUANTIFYING CHANGES IN THE DYNAMICS OF MICROBIAL POPULATIONS - A method for quantifying an amount of a viable microorganism includes subjecting a fluid sample suspected of containing a viable microorganism to a temperature change, and correlating the temperature history of the fluid sample to the amount of the viable microorganism contained in the fluid sample. The method may include the steps of bringing, the fluid sample to a first temperature, and transferring the fluid sample to a second temperature that is different than the first temperature. After the step of transferring, next is the step of measuring a temperature change in the fluid sample over a predetermined period of time. The temperature change may then be correlated to the amount of the viable microorganism contained in the fluid sample. The method finds use in a variety of applications, including evaluation of compositions or compounds potentially having microbicidal, microbiostatic, or growth enhancing properties. | 12-09-2010 |
