The present application relates generally to adaptive user profiling for TV-centric home automation systems.
Home automation systems have been provided to control various home appliances, e.g., lighting, home theater sound systems, and environmental control systems such as heating and air conditioning. As understood herein, home automation systems typically require a user desiring a particular setting on a particular appliance to manually enter information into a central controller each time a user wishes to change a setting. This is tedious and moreover fails to account for the present recognition that a user may wish for a particular set of settings for a particular time of day, and another set for another time of day, thus requiring perpetual user intervention in the system to achieve the desired settings.
TV, as the center of the home automation system controller, can provide a unified User Interface to show all connected wireless sensor-equipped devices at home. A user can use a TV remote to click into each sensor-equipped device in a home and change its settings, such as turn on/off a light, adjust room temperature, turn on/off doors or window blinds, adjust audio device volume, etc. The control interface to users can also be implemented using alternative methods (or combinations) such as voice recognition where users can speak out the command they want, or gesture recognition (if a camera device presents) where users use hands to point to target device and show commands (e.g., up/down).
Accordingly, a system includes a TV display, a TV processor controlling the display and accessing a computer readable storage medium, and a control communication interface communicating with the TV processor. The control communication interface may be a standard networking interface (wireless or Ethernet) connecting directly to wireless sensors or via an external controller device. A lighting controller controls energization and/or brightness of one or more lamps in a home, and the TV processor communicates with the lighting controller using the control communication interface to control the lighting controller to establish settings for the lamp. Also, a home theater controller controls at least one home theater component and communicates with the TV processor through the control communication interface, with the TV processor controlling the home theater controller to establish at least one setting for a home theater such as speaker volume, bass, etc. Moreover, a room temperature controller controls temperature of at least one room in a home in which the TV processor is disposed. The TV processor communicates with the room temperature controller using the control communication interface to control the room temperature controller to establish temperature settings. The TV processor adapts the settings for the lamp and/or the setting for the home theater and/or the temperature settings based on user behavior.
In example embodiments the TV processor establishes respective home system modes and appliance settings for each controller for each mode and controls the controllers to establish the appliance settings for the respective appliance based on a mode selection input to the TV processor. Also, in some embodiments the TV processor uses a wireless communication system to communicate with the controllers. The TV processor may adapt to user behaviors noted as input to the TV processor and/or sensed by controller sensors and communicated to the TV processor. The TV processor adapts to user behaviors by automatically establishing a mode and/or by automatically changing at least one appliance setting of a mode.
If desired, each mode can include respective appliance settings for a mixture of lighting controller, temperature controller and a home theater controller. The TV processor can automatically command appliance settings based on user interactions. As an example, TV may switch appliance settings to a home theater mode to be established by the controllers in response to receiving indication of engagement of an optical storage disk inserted to a disk player. In example implementations the TV processor automatically establishes a mode based on time of day in response to observed history user behavior, which may be recorded in TV on an hourly basis.
In another aspect, a system includes a TV display and a TV processor controlling the display and accessing a tangible computer readable storage medium bearing instructions. The instructions cause the processor to communicate with at least first and second home automation system controllers. The first controller controls a home appliance that does not send to the TV processor or receive from the TV processor audio/video information. The instructions also cause the TV processor to establish respective home system modes and appliance settings for each controller for each mode, and to control the controllers to establish the appliance settings for the respective appliance based on a mode selection input to the TV processor.
In another aspect, a TV includes a TV display, a processor communicating with the TV display, and a computer readable storage medium accessible to the processor and bearing logic to cause the processor to present on the display a user interface (UI) listing two or more home modes. Each mode is correlated to plural settings associated with respective plural home appliances. The processor receives user input through the UI representing user selection of a selected home mode and automatically establishes the settings associated with the selected home mode.
In another embodiment the ambient lighting in the house and temperature may be changed based on the theme of the content being watched on TV. For example, a thriller or a suspense movie may require dim light and lower temperature as compared to an action/adventure movie. The TV gathers the content information based on the meta-tag associated with it (or based on mode selection by the user).
The details of the present invention, both as to its structure and operation, can best be understood in reference to the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts, and in which:
Referring initially to
The computer readable storage medium 20 may be solid state or disk-based storage containing data and instructions to the TV processor 18 to execute portions of the logic divulged below. It is to be understood that while
Additionally, the TV 12 may include a wireless data communication interface 28 such as but not limited to a WiFi transceiver for communicating with a portable computer (PC) 30 in the home in which the TV 12 is disposed. The TV 12 may also include a control communication interface 32 such as a ZigBee interface as defined by the Z-Wave Alliance to communicate with smart home appliances such as the home theater 26, a lighting controller 34, a room temperature controller 36, and other appliance controllers 38 such as refrigerator controllers, security lock controllers, etc. Non-limiting examples of such controllers may be provided by Control4, ControlThink, etc. Wired paths may also or alternatively be used. A user can input wireless commands to the TV 12 using a portable remote control device 40 which transmits signals such as infrared (IR) signals to a wireless receiver 42 on the TV 12.
Turning to the details of an example non-limiting lighting controller 34, the lighting controller 34 is used to control the energization and/or brightness of one or more lamps 44 in the home. The lighting controller 34 typically contains a lighting processor 46 accessing a computer readable storage medium 48. Also, the lighting controller 34 includes a control communication interface 50 for communicating with the control communication interface 32 of the TV 12.
The example non-limiting home theater 26 may include a theater processor 52 accessing a computer readable storage medium 54. Also, the theater controller 26 includes a control communication interface 56 for communicating with the control communication interface 32 of the TV 12. The home theater 26 can include one or more receptacles for receiving one or more optical video disks for play by a disk player 58, for processing of data on the disk and sending resulting image information to the TV processor 18 for presentation on the TV display 16. Further, the home theater 26 may include one or more audio speakers and/or bass amplifier 60.
The example non-limiting room temperature controller 36 may include a temperature processor 62 accessing a computer readable storage medium 64. Also, the temperature controller 36 can include a control communication interface 66 for communicating with the control communication interface 32 of the TV 12. The controller 36 may include one or more temperature sensors 68 sending signals to the processor 62 for controlling a heater 70 and an air conditioning unit 72 to establish a desired room temperature in accordance with principles below.
The example non-limiting appliance controller 36 may include an appliance processor 74 accessing a computer readable storage medium 76. Also, the appliance controller 38 can include a control communication interface 78 for communicating with the control communication interface 32 of the TV 12. The controller 38 may include one or more appliance sensors 80 sending signals to the processor 74 for controlling the appliance. Without limitation an appliance sensor 80 may be a door lock sensor sensing whether a controlled door is open/closed/locked/unlocked, a temperature sensor, a light sensor, etc.
Thus, for example, default settings may be established for each mode and the UI of
In contrast, in the example shown in
As shown in
In an example “home vacant” mode all lights are caused to be turned off with the exception of background lighting, which may be set to “automatic”, i.e., to establish the lighting configuration input locally to the lighting controller 34. The home theater 26 is caused to assume the “off” configuration, room temperature is set to “power saving”, and the appliance controller 38 caused to assume the automatic mode.
Now referring to
Subsequently, as shown in
Proceeding to block 90, user feedback is received and collected from one or more of the controlled devices regarding actual settings input by the user to the devices. As an example, suppose that from Monday to Friday, a user usually arrives home at 6 pm as indicated by a door lock sensor 80 of a security appliance controller, where this event is saved in a storage media and later can be conveyed to the TV processor 18. Suppose further that the user typically begins cooking at 6:30 pm as indicated by a temperature sensor of an oven controller, with the TV being turned on by the user just after user opens the door. Suppose further that the TV is typically tuned by the user to a favorite channel, e.g., evening news.
Accordingly, at block 94 the user behaviors and times of the behaviors are recorded by the TV and the home mode adjusted accordingly. The information may be stored and maintained in a database in the TV to generate and/or change each setting and user profiles adaptively. Using the example above, the “party hour” mode settings might be automatically invoked at 6 pm or at such time as the door lock sensor indicates the door has been opened, with the “dinner” mode settings automatically switched to at 6:30 pm or upon activation of the oven as indicated by an oven controller temperature sensor. Additionally, if a user more than M times changes an individual setting while in a particular mode, e.g., repeatedly dims lights that are otherwise set to “fully on”, the TV processor 18 automatically changes the setting from its current value to the value repeatedly changed to by the user.
Other devices with control sensors can be automatically adjusted based on current user activities, e.g., switch to dinner mode at 7:30 pm. If the TV processor 18 accesses not only a clock but an electronic calendar as well, at block 96 mode settings can be modified or created for user behaviors observed during weekends with the corresponding settings invoked only during weekend days.
Additionally, correlations between observed user behaviors as indicated by the various system sensors and user inputs can be used to predict user preferences based on probabilities and presented to users for their choices. For example, when a particular user input or behavior occurs that in the past has been correlated to multiple mode selections, as indicated at block 98 in
As a more advanced control technique for home theater mode, the appliance settings can be dynamically changed according to the theme of a movie which is being playing. For example, if a movie has a thriller theme, the lighting system may be further dimmed or turned off to create a darker environment; if a movie is a story with winter theme (e.g. snowing), the cooling system may further reduce the temperature of the room. The theme information of a movie can be collected from a disc player and sent to TV for correlation and processing to adjust settings of the lighting, temperature control and other appliances.
While the particular ADAPTIVE USER PROFILING FOR TV-CENTRIC HOME AUTOMATION SYSTEM is herein shown and described in detail, it is to be understood that the subject matter which is encompassed by the present invention is limited only by the claims.