The present inventions relate generally to communications, more specifically to providing message during communications, for example in wireless communication devices.
Avatars are animated characters such as faces, and are generally known. The animation of facial expressions, for example, may be controlled by speech processing such that the mouth is made to move in sync with the speech to give the face an appearance of speaking. A method to add expressions to messages by using text with embedded emoticons, such as:-) providing a smiley face, is also known. Use of an avatar with scripted behavior such that the gesture is predetermined to express a particular emotion or message is also known as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,880,731, Liles et al. These methods require a keyboard having full set of keys or multiple keystrokes to enable the desired avatar feature.
The present inventions provide methods in an electronic communication device to control an attribute complimenting a primary message.
During a communication such as, but not limited to, a live conversation, voice mail and e-mail, between first and second users using first and second communication devices, respectively, the first user as a originator may annotate the communication by attaching an image, or an avatar, expressing his emotional state regarding the present topic of the communication, and may change the avatar to reflect his emotional state as the communication progresses. The second user, as a recipient using the second communication device, sees the avatar, which the first user attached, as he listens to the first user speaks, and sees the avatar change from one image to another as the first user changes the avatar during the conversation using the first communication device. The first user may attach an image from pre-stored images in the first communication device. To easily access images, the numeric keys of the first communication device may be assigned to pre-selected images in a certain order.
The first user may initially add an image identifying himself to the second user as he initiates a call to the second user. The image may be a picture of the first user, a cartoon character, or any depiction identifying the first user, which the first user chooses to attach. On the receiving end, the second user may simply view what the first user has attached as an identifier, or may attach his own image choice to identify the first user. For example, the first user attaches a picture of himself to identify himself to the second user as initiates a call; the second user, having identified the caller as the first user, switches the picture of the first user with a cartoon character, which the second user has pre-defined to be the first user.
As the first user carries on with the conversation, a visual attribute may be automatically attached by detecting the voice characteristics of the first user by the first communication device as it transmits the conversation. For example, the loudness of the first user's voice may be manifested as a change in the size of the image, and his voice inflection at the end of a sentence, indicating the sentence as a question, may be manifested with the image tilting to the side. For multiple speakers, the image representing the speaker may be automatically changed from one speaker to the next by recognizing the voice of the current speaker.
On the receiving end, the communication device of the second user recognizes that the communication with the first user, be it a live conversation, voice mail, or text message, is an annotated communication, and reproduces the communication appropriate for the communication device of the second user. That is, based on the capability of the communication device of the second user and/or based on his preference, an appropriate reproduction mode is selected. For example, if the first user initiates a call to the second user using an avatar but the communication device of the second user lacks the display capability or the second user wishes not to view the first user's avatar, then the communication is reproduced in a form of audio only in the second user's communication device.
If the communication from the first user is an annotated text message such as an e-mail message or Short Messages Service (“SMS”) message, the second user may simply view the text message along with the attached avatar, or if the second user's communication device is capable of text-to-speech conversion, the second user may listen to the message while viewing the avatar. The second user may also have the message reproduced only audibly by the text-to-speech conversion process with the annotation providing additional expression such as rising inflection at the end of a question and varied loudness based on emphasized words.
With a network involved in the communication between the first and second users, some of the tasks may be performed by the network. For example, the network may determine an appropriate form of the message reproduction based upon the knowledge of the capability of the receiving device, and may reformat the annotated message received from the transmitting device to make the annotated message compatible with the receiving device.
To easily attach an avatar to the communication, the keypad 202 of the first communication device may be programmed to have pre-selected avatars or images assigned to its input keys as shown in
Instead of having the first user manually select an avatar from the pre-selected avatars, the first communication device may automatically select an avatar that is appropriate for the audio communication based upon the characteristics of the audio communication.
The audio characteristic to be determined may not be limited to the voice recognition. For example, the first communication device may recognize a spoken sentence as a question by detecting an inflection at the end of the sentence, and may attach an avatar showing a titling face having a quizzical expression. The first communication device may also detect the first user's loudness, and may adjust the size of the mouth of the avatar, or may make avatar more animated, or may detect a pre-selected word or phrase and display a corresponding or pre-assigned avatar based on the pre-selected word or phrase.
The message from the first user may take a form of a recorded message such as an annotated voice mail, which may also be reproduced as described above. For text only message, an avatar may be displayed before, after, or along side the message being displayed. If the second communication device is capable of converting the text message to audio, then the primary message part of the text only message may be converted to audio and be played, and an avatar based on the annotation may be displayed as illustrated in
The first user 502 may also attach a specific avatar 602, such as a photographic image of his face, to identify himself as he places a call to the second user 504 from the first communication device 506 as illustrated in
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it is to be understood that the invention is not so limited. Numerous modifications, changes, variations, substitutions and equivalents will occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10287414 | Nov 2002 | US |
Child | 11366290 | Mar 2006 | US |