Claims
- 1. A currency evaluation device for receiving a stack of currency bills, rapidly evaluating all the bills in the stack, and then re-stacking the bills, said device comprising;
a feed mechanism for receiving a stack of currency bills and feeding said bills in the direction of the wide dimension of the bills, one at a time, to a feed station; a bill transport mechanism for transporting bills, in the direction of the wide dimension of the bills, from said feed station to a stacking station; a stationary optical scanning head located between said feed and stacking stations for scanning a preselected segment of a central portion of each bill transported between said stations by said transport mechanism, said scanning head including at least one light source for illuminating a strip of said preselected segment of a bill, and at least one detector for receiving reflected light from the illuminated strip on the bill and producing an output signal representing variations in the intensity of the reflected light; means for sampling said output signal at preselected intervals as a bill is moved across said scanning head in the direction of the wide dimension of the bill, each of said output signal samples being proportional to the intensity of the light reflected from a different strip of said preselected segment of a bill; a memory for storing characteristic signal samples produced by scanning said preselected segments of bills of different denominations with said scanning head and sampling said output signal at said preselected intervals, each of said stored signal samples being proportional to the intensity of the light reflected from a different strip of said preselected segment of a bill; and signal processing means for receiving said signal samples and determining the denomination of each scanned bill by comparing said stored signal samples with said output signal samples produced by the scanning of each bill with said scanning head.
- 2. The currency evaluation device of claim 1 which includes an encoder coupled to said transport mechanism for monitoring the movement of each bill by producing a repetitive tracking signal synchronized with incremental movements of said transport mechanism, and means urging each bill into firm engagement with said transport mechanism and said scanning head to ensure a fixed relationship between the increments of movement of each bill and the corresponding increments of movement of said transport mechanism which is synchronized with said encoder.
- 3. The currency evaluation device of claim 1 which includes means for detecting a borderline around the image printed on each bill, and wherein said preselected segment is located inside said borderline, and the scanning of said preselected segment is initiated at a prescribed interval following the detection of said borderline.
- 4. The currency evaluation device of claim 1 which includes signal processing means responsive to the output signals from said detector for determining the denomination of each scanned bill before the bill has been advanced to a stacking station, and
means responsive to said signal processing means for altering the movement of a scanned bill in response to the denomination determination for the bill, before the bill is advanced to a stacking station.
- 5. An improved method for discriminating between currency bills of different denominations comprising the steps of:
illuminating a predetermined section of a currency bill by focusing at least one strip of light thereupon; detecting the light reflected off said illuminated section of said bill to generate an analog reflectance signal; generating relative lateral displacement between said strip of light and said bill so as to illuminate and optically scan successive sections of said bill along a predetermined dimension thereof; obtaining a series of analog reflectance signals corresponding to light reflected from each of said successive bill sections, said reflectance signals being taken at intervals corresponding to successive increments of displacement of said bill relative to said strip of light, said successive increments of displacement of said bill being smaller than the width of said strip of light in the direction of bill movement so that said successive bill sections overlap with each other; digitizing and processing said series of analog reflectance signals to yield a set of digital data samples which, in combination, represent a data pattern characteristic of the currency denomination of said bill; generating and storing a set of master characteristic patterns corresponding to optical scanning of original bills of each of the different currency denominations to be discriminated; and comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to each of said stored master patterns to determine the degree of correlation therebetween, and thereby to identify the denomination of said currency bill.
- 6. An improved method for discriminating between currency bills of different denominations comprising the steps of:
illuminating a predetermined section of a currency bill by focusing at least one strip of light thereupon; detecting the light reflected off said illuminated section of said bill to generate an analog reflectance signal; generating relative lateral displacement between said strip of light and said bill so as to illuminate and optically scan successive sections of said bill along a predetermined dimension thereof; obtaining a series of analog reflectance signals corresponding to light reflected from each of said successive bill sections; digitizing and processing said series of analog reflectance signals to yield a set of digital data samples which, in combination, represent a data pattern characteristic of the currency denomination of said bill; generating and storing a set of master characteristic patterns corresponding to optical scanning of original bills of each of the different currency denominations to be discriminated; dividing at least one of (1) said data pattern and (2) said master characteristic patterns into a plurality of sections, and shifting selected ones of said sections relative to each other; and comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to each of said stored master patterns to determine the degree of correlation therebetween, and thereby to identify the denomination of said currency bill.
- 7. The method of claim 6, wherein said dividing step includes shifting different ones of said sections relative to each other by different amounts.
- 8. The method of claim 7, wherein said dividing step includes progressively shifting samples in successive ones of said sections.
- 9. The method of claim 8, wherein if said degree of correlation fails to meet a predetermined threshold, said dividing step is repeated using a progressively increasing number of sections in said plurality of sections.
- 10. The method of claim 6, wherein said dividing step includes measuring shrinkage of said bill, the number of sections in said plurality of sections being directly proportional to the measured shrinkage.
- 11. The method of claim 6, wherein said dividing step includes dividing each of said master characteristic patterns into a progressively increasing number of sections, progressively shifting samples in successive ones of said sections for each of said number of sections to generate a plurality of shifted patterns for each of said master characteristic patterns, and storing in a memory said plurality of shifted patterns for each of said master characteristic patterns.
- 12. The method of claim 11, wherein said comparing step includes comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to each of said stored master patterns and said stored plurality of shifted patterns to determine the degree of correlation therebetween.
- 13. The method of claim 11, wherein each of said plurality of shifted patterns correspond to different degrees of shrinkage for said bill, and wherein said comparing step includes comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to said stored patterns corresponding to a measured degree of shrinkage for said bill.
- 14. The method of claim 6, further including the step of positively identifying said scanned bill as having the denomination corresponding to the stored master pattern for which the degree of correlation is found to be the highest and at least equal to a predefined correlation threshold.
- 15. An improved method for discriminating between currency bills of different denominations comprising the steps of:
illuminating a predetermined section of a currency bill by focusing at least one strip of light thereupon; detecting the light reflected off said illuminated section of said bill to generate an analog reflectance signal; generating relative lateral displacement between said strip of light and said bill so as to illuminate and optically scan successive sections of said bill along a predetermined dimension thereof; obtaining a series of analog reflectance signals corresponding to light reflected from each of said successive bill sections; digitizing and processing said series of analog reflectance signals to yield a set of digital data samples which, in combination, represent a data pattern characteristic of the currency denomination of said bill; generating and storing a set of master characteristic patterns corresponding to optical scanning of original bills of each of the different currency denominations to be discriminated; generating and storing a set of shifted patterns by dividing each of said master characteristic patterns into a plurality of sections and by shifting selected ones of said sections relative to each other; and comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to selected ones of said stored master characteristic patterns and said stored shifted patterns to determine the degree of correlation therebetween, and thereby to identify the denomination of said currency bill.
- 16. The method of claim 15, wherein said step of generating and storing a set of shifted patterns includes dividing each of said master characteristic patterns into a progressively increasing number of sections, progressively shifting samples in successive ones of said sections for each of said number of sections to generate a plurality of shifted patterns for each of said master characteristic patterns, and storing said plurality of shifted patterns for each of said master characteristic patterns.
- 17. The method of claim 15, wherein each of said shifted patterns correspond to different degrees of shrinkage for said bill, and wherein said comparing step includes comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to said stored patterns corresponding to a measured degree of shrinkage for said bill.
- 18. An improved method for discriminating between currency bills of different denominations comprising the steps of:
illuminating a predetermined section of a currency bill by focusing at least one strip of light thereupon; detecting the light reflected off said illuminated section of said bill to generate an analog reflectance signal; generating relative lateral displacement between said strip of light and said bill so as to illuminate and optically scan successive sections of said bill along a predetermined dimension thereof; obtaining a series of analog reflectance signals corresponding to light reflected from each of said successive bill sections; digitizing and processing said series of analog reflectance signals to yield a set of digital data samples which, in combination, represent a data pattern characteristic of the currency denomination of said bill; generating and storing a set of master characteristic patterns corresponding to optical scanning of original bills of each of the different currency denominations to be discriminated; comparing said data pattern for said scanned currency bill to each of said stored master patterns to determine the degree of correlation therebetween; and determining the two master patterns having the highest degrees of correlation with the data pattern of said scanned bill, determining the difference between those two highest degrees of correlation, and positively identifying said scanned bill as having the denomination corresponding to the stored master pattern with the highest degree of correlation with said characteristic pattern only if said difference is greater than a predetermined threshold.
- 19. The method of claim 18, wherein said determining step includes positively identifying said scanned bill as having the denomination corresponding to the stored master pattern with the highest degree of correlation with said characteristic pattern only if said difference is greater than a first predetermined threshold and if the highest degree of correlation is greater than a second predetermined threshold.
- 20. A currency evaluation device for receiving a stack of currency bills, rapidly evaluating all the bills in the stack, and then re-stacking the bills, said device comprising;
a feed mechanism for receiving a stack of currency bills and feeding said bills in the direction of a predetermined dimension of the bills, one at a time, to a feed station; a bill transport mechanism for transporting bills at a first operating speed, in the direction of the predetermined dimension of the bills, from said feed station to a stacking station; a stationary optical scanning head located between said feed and stacking stations for scanning a preselected segment of a central portion of each bill transported between said stations by said transport mechanism, said scanning head including at least one light source for illuminating a strip of said preselected segment of a bill, and at least one detector for receiving reflected light from the illuminated strip on the bill and producing an output signal representing variations in the intensity of the reflected light; means for sampling said output signal at preselected intervals as a bill is moved across said scanning head in the direction of the predetermined dimension of the bill; a memory for storing characteristic signal samples produced by scanning said preselected segments of bills of different denominations with said scanning head and sampling said output signal at said preselected intervals; signal processing means for receiving said signal samples and determining the denomination of each scanned bill by comparing said stored signal samples with said output signal samples produced by the scanning of each bill with said scanning head; and means, responsive to said signal processing means failing to determine the denomination of a particular scanned bill, for decelerating said bill transport mechanism from said first operating speed to a second operating speed such that during the deceleration of said bill transport mechanism, said particular scanned bill is transported to said stacking station and a next upstream bill from said particular scanned bill is scanned by said scanning head.
- 21. The currency evaluation device of claim 20, wherein said decelerating means decelerates said bill transport mechanism to said second operating speed at such a rate that said scanning head completes scanning said next upstream bill prior to said bill transport mechanism reaching said second operating speed.
- 22. The currency evaluation device of claim 20, wherein said second operating speed is approximately one-third of said first operating speed.
- 23. The currency evaluation device of claim 20, wherein said decelerating means decelerates said bill transport mechanism from said second operating speed to a third operating speed after said next upstream bill is scanned by said scanning head.
- 24. The currency evaluation device of claim 20, wherein said decelerating means decelerates said bill transport mechanism from said second operating speed to a complete halt prior to a bill located upstream from said next upstream bill being scanned by said scanning head.
- 25. The currency evaluation device of claim 20, wherein each of said output signal samples and said stored signal samples is proportional to the intensity of the light reflected from a different strip of said preselected segment of a bill.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/127,334, filed Sep. 27, 1993, which in turn is continuation of application Ser. No. 07/885,648, filed May 19, 1992, which in turn is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 07/475,111, filed Feb. 5, 1990, and now abandoned.
Continuations (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08226660 |
Apr 1994 |
US |
Child |
10391111 |
Mar 2003 |
US |
Parent |
07885648 |
May 1992 |
US |
Child |
08127334 |
Sep 1993 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08127334 |
Sep 1993 |
US |
Child |
08226660 |
Apr 1994 |
US |
Parent |
07475111 |
Feb 1990 |
US |
Child |
07885648 |
May 1992 |
US |