Mapping each of several communicative functions during contexts to multiple coordinated behaviours of a virtual character

Details for Australian Patent Application No. 2006252392 (hide)

Owner University of Southern California

Inventors Wang, Ning; Vilhjalmsson, Hannes Hogni; Johnson, William Lewis; Valente, Andre; Samtani, Prasan

Agent Shelston IP

Pub. Number AU-B-2006252392

PCT Pub. Number WO2006/130841

Priority 60/686,900 02.06.05 US

Filing date 2 June 2006

Wipo publication date 7 December 2006

Acceptance publication date 13 October 2011

International Classifications

G09B 19/00 (2006.01) Teaching not covered by other main groups of this subclass

G06T 13/00 (2006.01) Animation effects in two dimensional (2D) images, e.g. using sprites

G09B 3/00 (2006.01) Manually- or mechanically-operated teaching appliances working with questions and answers

G09B 19/06 (2006.01) Teaching not covered by other main groups of this subclass - Foreign languages

Event Publications

10 January 2008 PCT application entered the National Phase

  PCT publication WO2006/130841 Priority application(s): WO2006/130841

22 September 2011 Amendment Made

  The nature of the amendment is: Amend the invention title to read Mapping each of several communicative functions during contexts to multiple coordinated behaviours of a virtual character

13 October 2011 Application Accepted

  Published as AU-B-2006252392

9 February 2012 Standard Patent Sealed

Legal

The information provided by the Site not in the nature of legal or other professional advice. The information provided by the Site is derived from third parties and may contain errors. You must make your own enquiries and seek independent advice from the relevant industry professionals before acting or relying on any information contained herein. Check the above data against the Australian Patent Office AUSPAT database.

Next and Previous Patents/Applications

2006252394-Modified-release composition of at least one form of venlafaxine

2006252390-Prevention and treatment of osteochondrosis in animals and humans