18215647. Routing Fanout Coupling Estimation and Compensation simplified abstract (Apple Inc.)

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Routing Fanout Coupling Estimation and Compensation

Organization Name

Apple Inc.

Inventor(s)

Kingsuk Brahma of Mountain View CA (US)

Jie Won Ryu of San Jose CA (US)

Satish S. Iyengar of Saratoga CA (US)

Yue Jack Chu of Cupertino CA (US)

Jongyup Lim of San Jose CA (US)

Routing Fanout Coupling Estimation and Compensation - A simplified explanation of the abstract

This abstract first appeared for US patent application 18215647 titled 'Routing Fanout Coupling Estimation and Compensation

Simplified Explanation

The patent application describes systems and methods to compensate for crosstalk in electronic displays caused by a fanout or other signal interference. This is achieved by using buffered previous image data. The technical effects of this compensation include improved display of image frames by mitigating or eliminating image artifacts.

  • Systems and methods to compensate for crosstalk in electronic displays
  • Crosstalk refers to coupling distortions caused by signal interference
  • The compensation is based on buffered previous image data
  • Technical effects include improved display of image frames
  • Mitigates or eliminates image artifacts caused by crosstalk

Potential Applications

  • Consumer electronics industry
  • Display technology manufacturers
  • Television and monitor manufacturers

Problems Solved

  • Crosstalk in electronic displays
  • Image artifacts caused by crosstalk
  • Degraded image quality in displays

Benefits

  • Improved display quality
  • Mitigation or elimination of image artifacts
  • Enhanced user experience with electronic displays


Original Abstract Submitted

Systems and methods are described here to compensate for crosstalk (e.g., coupling distortions) that may be caused by a fanout overlaid or otherwise affecting signals transmitted within an active area of an electronic display. The systems and methods may be based on buffered previous image data. Technical effects associated with compensating for the crosstalk may include improved display of image frames since some image artifacts are mitigated and/or made unperceivable or eliminated.