WO2002103942A1 - Method of prompting audience members in a audience identification system - Google Patents

Method of prompting audience members in a audience identification system Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2002103942A1
WO2002103942A1 PCT/US2002/018328 US0218328W WO02103942A1 WO 2002103942 A1 WO2002103942 A1 WO 2002103942A1 US 0218328 W US0218328 W US 0218328W WO 02103942 A1 WO02103942 A1 WO 02103942A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
audience
audience member
receiver
prompting
variable
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2002/018328
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Paul Donato
Original Assignee
Nielsen Media Research, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Nielsen Media Research, Inc. filed Critical Nielsen Media Research, Inc.
Priority to CA2450226A priority Critical patent/CA2450226C/en
Priority to JP2003506130A priority patent/JP2004536501A/en
Priority to NZ530015A priority patent/NZ530015A/en
Priority to MXPA03011490A priority patent/MXPA03011490A/en
Priority to BR0210521-7A priority patent/BR0210521A/en
Priority to EP02741954.8A priority patent/EP1400044B1/en
Publication of WO2002103942A1 publication Critical patent/WO2002103942A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N21/00Selective content distribution, e.g. interactive television or video on demand [VOD]
    • H04N21/40Client devices specifically adapted for the reception of or interaction with content, e.g. set-top-box [STB]; Operations thereof
    • H04N21/43Processing of content or additional data, e.g. demultiplexing additional data from a digital video stream; Elementary client operations, e.g. monitoring of home network or synchronising decoder's clock; Client middleware
    • H04N21/442Monitoring of processes or resources, e.g. detecting the failure of a recording device, monitoring the downstream bandwidth, the number of times a movie has been viewed, the storage space available from the internal hard disk
    • H04N21/44213Monitoring of end-user related data
    • H04N21/44218Detecting physical presence or behaviour of the user, e.g. using sensors to detect if the user is leaving the room or changes his face expression during a TV program
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04HBROADCAST COMMUNICATION
    • H04H60/00Arrangements for broadcast applications with a direct linking to broadcast information or broadcast space-time; Broadcast-related systems
    • H04H60/35Arrangements for identifying or recognising characteristics with a direct linkage to broadcast information or to broadcast space-time, e.g. for identifying broadcast stations or for identifying users
    • H04H60/45Arrangements for identifying or recognising characteristics with a direct linkage to broadcast information or to broadcast space-time, e.g. for identifying broadcast stations or for identifying users for identifying users
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N21/00Selective content distribution, e.g. interactive television or video on demand [VOD]
    • H04N21/40Client devices specifically adapted for the reception of or interaction with content, e.g. set-top-box [STB]; Operations thereof
    • H04N21/43Processing of content or additional data, e.g. demultiplexing additional data from a digital video stream; Elementary client operations, e.g. monitoring of home network or synchronising decoder's clock; Client middleware
    • H04N21/441Acquiring end-user identification, e.g. using personal code sent by the remote control or by inserting a card

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the prompting of audience members to
  • Program receivers include television receivers,
  • Tuning data includes the identity of the channel or station to which the program receiver is
  • This manual input is frequently provided in the form of a
  • Peoplemeter® which not only allows each audience member to manually enter a
  • this visual status indicator may comprise a plurality of
  • the manual input device alternatively may be a battery-powered remote
  • control or other remote device that includes a keypad and an infra-red pulse transmitter
  • the measurement apparatus or other data collector also provides a visual status indication as discussed above.
  • An exemplary remote control of this type is disclosed by
  • identities from the manual input device are commonly time stamped with the times of each tuning event and/or of each change in audience composition.
  • audience member records are then stored in a store and forward unit within the statistically selected location for subsequent forwarding to a data collection central office, such as on a
  • the prompting is too infrequent, the cooperating individual may forget to enter data at
  • the present invention is directed to the use of tuning and/or
  • prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an audience meter comprises the following: determining a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver; prompting the audience member to enter the
  • audience member identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver is less than a threshold; and, suppressing prompting of the
  • audience meter comprises the following: determining a variable as a function of a number
  • audience meter comprises the following: prompting the audience member to enter the
  • audience member identification at intermittent prompting occasions; at each prompting occasion, determining a likelihood based upon past audience composition and tuning
  • prompting occasion indicates that it is likely that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver.
  • audience meter comprises the following: applying a heuristic to determine whether the
  • audience member is in an audience of a receiver; counting the audience members in the
  • audience of the receiver to produce a count; prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification if the heuristic indicates that the audience member is not
  • a method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an audience meter comprises the following: determining a probability that the audience
  • audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater than the threshold.
  • audience meter comprises the following: determining a variable as a function of a number
  • the audience member if the variable is greater than the threshold and if the probability is
  • Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of an audience measurement system in
  • Figure 2 is a schematic diagram of an audience measurement apparatus of
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a data storage I 5 and forwarding unit of
  • Figures 4A and 4B form a flow chart of a prompting program that may be
  • FIGS. 5 - 8 are tables of exemplary data useful in the explanation of the
  • an audience measurement system 10 is provided at a
  • statistically selected location 12 may be a household.
  • measurement system 10 includes a portable remote control device 14 which controls a
  • the receiver 16 for example, may be a television receiver as shown in Figure
  • the receiver 16 could instead be a radio, a computer, or any other receiver that
  • the portable remote control device 14 may have a user interface such as a
  • keypad which includes buttons to allow an audience member to enter channel numbers, to
  • the portable remote control device 14 can be used from a remote position 18 in order to change the channel, volume level, and so on of the receiver 16.
  • the keypad of the portable remote control device may also permit audience
  • buttons of the keypad may be suitably
  • the time and date of the press may be stored with the corresponding tuning
  • the audience measurement system 10 is arranged to log data on audience membership (hereinafter “audience member identification data").
  • the audience measurement system 10 may be arranged to also log tuning data regarding the programs
  • the logged data is
  • the network 20 may be any mechanism for conveying the logged data to the data collection central office 22.
  • the network 20 may be a public switched telephone network, as is
  • the portable remote control device 14 may be used to enter member
  • the measurement apparatus 24 may also be arranged to acquire tuning data
  • the audience member identification data may be entered by devices other
  • a Peoplemeter® may be used to calculate the distance between the portable remote control device 14.
  • the audience member identification data may be entered by the audience member identification data
  • EPG electronic program guide
  • the acquired tuning and audience member identification data can be communicated to the data collection central office 22 by
  • the audience measurement system 10 includes a data storage and
  • forwarding unit 26 which collects the tuning and audience member identification data from the measurement apparatus 24 and which stores the tuning and audience member identification data until a scheduled forwarding time when the tuning and audience
  • storage and forwarding unit 26 may also store and forward tuning and audience member
  • the audience measurement system 10 the measurement
  • the measurement apparatus 24 can comprise logic and a memory so that
  • the current tuning data can be acquired and determined by the measurement apparatus 24
  • the measurement apparatus 24 may receive a signal replica from a signal detector 34.
  • this signal detector 34 may be in the
  • This video signal source detector may be
  • the signal detector 34 may be in the form of a microphone which acquires a replica of an audio output from a speaker of the receiver 16. Accordingly, the signal detector 34 is arranged to non-intrusively acquire from the receiver
  • the signal replica acquired by the signal detector 34 can then be processed
  • an ancillary video and/or audio code such as a source
  • SID system identification
  • tuned program can be extracted from the signal replica and compared to reference
  • the signal detector 34 may be arranged to detect the local
  • apparatus 24 may receive an ON/OFF input from an ON/OFF sensor 36.
  • sensor 36 may be an inductive sensor which determines that the receiver 16
  • the receiver 16 is a television receiver
  • the ON/OFF sensor 36 may be an inductive sensor
  • the receiver may have a photodetector probe positioned in relation to the screen display of the receiver
  • sensor 36 can be any other type of sensor suitably arranged to determine the on/off status
  • the portable remote control device 14 In controlling the receiver 16, the portable remote control device 14
  • tuner appliances such as a television receiver, a VCR, and/or a
  • modes can be used to transmit a tuning or other command (e.g., a fast forward command
  • the currently active tuner e.g., the tuner of receiver 16 or of a set-top
  • one of the modes of the portable remote control device 14 is also used to transmit audience member
  • the keypad of the portable remote control device 14 may be any one of the keyspad of the portable remote control device 14.
  • the keypad of the portable remote control device 14 may be any one of the keyspad of the portable remote control device 14.
  • buttons associated with each of the audience members.
  • buttons may be used by the audience members exclusively
  • the measurement apparatus 24 as shown in Figure 2 includes a
  • microprocessor 52 suitably connected to a transceiver 54, the signal detector 34, a ROM
  • the transceiver 54 coupled to
  • the microprocessor 52 executing a program stored in the ROM 56, is used to receive
  • the measurement apparatus 24 may also respond to the signal detector 34, as discussed
  • This information can be temporarily stored in the RAM 58.
  • measurement apparatus 24 additionally may be arranged to determine the ON/OFF status
  • the ON/OFF status of the receiver 16 is
  • the measurement apparatus 24 transmits the ON/OFF, tuning, and audience member
  • microprocessor 52 of a program stored in the ROM 56 acquires and/or determines tuning
  • the measurement apparatus 24 also acquires and/or determines the ON/OFF
  • measurement apparatus 24 receives audience member identification data and temporarily
  • the measurement apparatus 24 through use of the
  • interface 60 communicates any or all of this data to the data storage and forwarding unit
  • the measurement apparatus 24 may communicate this data to the data
  • the data storage and forwarding unit 26 includes a
  • microprocessor 82 suitably coupled to an interface 84, a ROM 86, a RAM 88, and an
  • the interface 84 and the interface 60 support communications between the
  • the ROM 86 stores a program 100 represented by the flow chart shown in
  • FIGS 4A and 4B in order to collect and forward tuning and audience member
  • receiver 16 in the statistically selected location 12 and to provide prompting instructions to
  • the 15 program 100 relies on audience participation history of each possible audience
  • SID source identification
  • Navigation characteristics indicate the manner in which certain audience members tune the receiver 16. For example, one of the
  • the program 100 is particularly useful where the measurement apparatus 24 cannot clearly
  • An instance of the program 100 as shown in Figures 4 A and 4B may be provided at the data storage and forwarding unit 26 for each of the receivers at the
  • program 100 as shown in Figures 4 A and 4B may be arranged to execute at the data storage and forwarding unit 26 and to
  • an instance of the program 100 may be provided at the measurement apparatus
  • the program 100 at a block 102 acquires tuning data
  • the 100 instructs the appropriate measurement apparatus 24 to immediately prompt the audience members in the audience of the receiver 16 to identify themselves.
  • This prompting may be effected by on-screen displays on the receiver 16, by a visible display
  • the responsive audience member identification data is received at a block
  • transceiver 54 is communicated to the data storage and forwarding unit 26 by the
  • the measurement apparatus 24 may be provided
  • the program 100 at a block 108 stores the audience
  • the running accumulator is a
  • the table of Figure 5 illustrates a single month's accumulation of data for a
  • the table is further broken into the various audience members present in the statistically selected location 12, and the table further breaks down each audience
  • receiver location identities other that
  • bedroom, living room, and kitchen may be assigned to the receivers used in the
  • the tuning occasions section of the table stores data related to how many
  • each receiver 16 at the statistically selected location 12 was used, regardless of the number of audience members in the audience of that receiver
  • the 35-49 year old female audience member used the
  • the counts section of the table stores data related to the sum of the data by
  • audience member used the receiver in the bedroom eighteen times to receive programs at
  • audience member used the receiver in the bedroom one time to receive a program at 6:00
  • the 35-49 year old female audience member used the
  • collapsing is particularly useful during the first few months of initial data collection
  • the data alternatively could be stored in an accumulator table for all sets
  • This accumulator table is incremented each time there is a change in
  • tuning status or audience composition includes data for every person, time period, set,
  • the accumulator table may simply log each tuning event and each tuning event
  • such an accumulator table may be used to store
  • the tables store the basic information which is evaluated for each receiver
  • the data storage and forwarding unit 26 preferably includes four separate tables, a table for
  • variable weighting of data by recency of behavior which may be used, for example, during
  • the program 100 at a block 112 determines whether it is time to evaluate
  • the block 112 may use an elapsed
  • the elapsed time timer accumulates an amount of time T.
  • block 112 initiates an evaluation of the data stored in the tables to determine if prompting
  • the evaluation is a probability-based heuristic. 10
  • composition history at the statistically selected location 12 is mathematically summarized
  • composition in the household is such that the probability of a specific audience
  • composition exceeds a certain threshold value, then the prompt is suppressed.
  • the heuristic is an algorithm for parsimoniously summarizing
  • the objective is to determine audience composition. Rather than treating
  • this determination may be treated as a
  • co-location include co-receiving history and current response to an alternate receiver (co-location).
  • a block 114 determines whether the number
  • the measurement apparatus 24 collects
  • a block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience
  • a block 118 determines a variable NUMBER as a result of dividing a data value
  • COUNTS by a data value TUOCC.
  • the data value COUNTS is taken from the counts
  • SID from the program being received by the appropriate receiver is in SID class 11, and if
  • the appropriate receiver is the bedroom receiver, the data value for COUNTS is 19.
  • the data value TUOCC is taken from the tuning occasions row, at the
  • the program 100 For example, if the current day part is 6:30 AM, if the SID from the
  • the data value for TUOCC is 19.
  • predetermined threshold it may be necessary to collapse each cell in the tables from right
  • variable NUMBER may be recomputed.
  • a block 120 determines whether the variable NUMBER exceeds a
  • the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience members at the
  • a block 122 rounds NUMBER to the
  • current persons count may be derived, for example, by summing the number of audience
  • the current persons count may be
  • the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to
  • variable NUMBER is consistent with history as represented by
  • a block 124 sets a variable PREDICTED PERSON equal to the person having the
  • variable PREDICTED PERSON is set to the 35-49 year old
  • the block 124 computes the probability that the PREDICTED
  • PERSON the 35-49 year old female in the example is in the audience by dividing the
  • This lead in factor F LI is used to adjust the computed probability when the PREDICTED PERSON was in the audience of the relevant receiver during the immediately preceding day part.
  • This lead in factor F LI may be a
  • predetermined number set to a suitable value greater than one and is multiplied by the computed probability in order to increase the computed probability.
  • the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience members at the
  • data may be collapsed as indicated above. However, if the data is so collapsed, it is likely that the probability calculated at the block 124 is less than a predetermined threshold, so
  • the program 100 at a block 128 determines whether the
  • apparatus 24 is the PREDICTED PERSON. If the audience member, who is in the
  • the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience
  • the elapsed time timer used by the block 116 is reset, and the
  • program 100 returns to the block 116 in order to repeat the execution of blocks 112-130 at
  • the data storage and forwarding unit 26 At a particular time during the day, the data storage and forwarding unit 26
  • trigger prompts Such other events include, for example, a channel change when no
  • audience member is logged in, the passage of a predetermined number of days when a
  • navigation characteristics may provide valuable
  • Navigation characteristics indicate the manner in
  • tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also be correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also
  • Tuning styles can be described by a variety of terms depending on which
  • Tuning styles can be considered
  • the statistics used to summarize the data may or may
  • “appointment television” i.e, an audience member tunes to a channel carrying a selected
  • the mean rate of ⁇ is
  • the average number of channels For example, for every time period T (e.g., Vi hr), the average number of channels
  • acceleration is different. For example, two people may average twenty channel hits per
  • the average velocity is not a
  • the time period is thirty, minutes, the following ratio may be used to characterize
  • audience members For example, it may be the case that where an audience
  • classification and matching may be done specifically to distinguish between the channel-
  • the probability determined at the block 124 can be adjusted up
  • Certain parameters used by the program 100 may be downloadable from
  • the portable remote control device 14 may function in several ways
  • each of these modes may use a separate
  • ultrasonic or spread-spectrum radio could instead be employed.
  • the program 100 can be executed at each measurement apparatus 24 within the statistically selected location 12.
  • the program 100 can be executed at each measurement apparatus 24 within the statistically selected location 12.
  • storage and forwarding unit 26 can be performed by the measurement apparatus 24 so that the data storage and forwarding unit 26 can be eliminated.
  • the portable remote control device 14 is configured to control the portable remote control device 14 . Furthermore, as described above, the portable remote control device 14
  • the first embodiment 15 of the invention transmits tuning commands which are received by both the controlled tuner and by the measurement apparatus 24.
  • the portable remote control device 14 may be arranged to transmit tuning commands using codes recognized by the portable remote control device 14
  • the measurement apparatus 24 records the tuning event, converts the code into a form recognized by the
  • tuner of the receiver 16 passes the converted tuning command on to the tuner of the
  • the individual's portable remote control device 14 can then be arranged to
  • the prompting permitted by the block 116 may have multiple
  • the initial prompt could be flashed for 10 seconds.
  • the block 116 may be arranged to provide an audible tone
  • audience members may manually update audience composition without prompting as changes in audience composition
  • the elapsed time timer used by the block 116 may be
  • T could be based on the data entry performance of audience members.
  • the program 100 may shorten the interval T
  • the prompting interval T is shorter than required for this
  • the program 100 may lengthen the interval T between the audience member.
  • intervals T could be set for various audience members, depending on their previous
  • receiver tuning events occur, data relating to these events could be stored in a
  • weighted digraphs may be used to represent such knowledge.
  • the heuristic may be used to represent such knowledge.
  • audience members have
  • one person may surf while the other tunes by appointment.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Social Psychology (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Databases & Information Systems (AREA)
  • Testing, Inspecting, Measuring Of Stereoscopic Televisions And Televisions (AREA)
  • Two-Way Televisions, Distribution Of Moving Picture Or The Like (AREA)
  • Telephonic Communication Services (AREA)
  • Measurement Of The Respiration, Hearing Ability, Form, And Blood Characteristics Of Living Organisms (AREA)
  • Circuits Of Receivers In General (AREA)

Abstract

An audience measurement system determines the likelihood that an audience member is in the audience of a receiver during a particular day part. If the audience member is not likely to be in the audience of the receiver during that day part, the audience member is prompted to enter an audience member identification. On the other hand, if the audience member is likely to be in the audience of the receiving during that day part, prompting of the audience member to enter an audience member identification is suppressed.

Description

METHOD OF PROMPTING AUDIENCE MEMBERS IN AN AUDIENCE IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM
Technical Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the prompting of audience members to
identify themselves when they are in a receiving area associated with a receiver whose use
is being metered.
Background of the Invention
It is customary in the field of audience research to employ a measurement
apparatus with each program receiver within each of a plurality of statistically selected locations in order to determine tuning data. Program receivers include television receivers,
radio receivers, computers, and/or other devices capable of being tuned to programs that are distributed over the air, over cable systems, by way of satellites, etc. Tuning data, for example, includes the identity of the channel or station to which the program receiver is
tuned and/or the identity of the program to which the program receiver is tuned. It is further customary to provide a manual input 20 device that can be used by those
audience members who are actually in an audience of a receiver to indicate their identities
to the measurement apparatus. This manual input is frequently provided in the form of a
Peoplemeter® which not only allows each audience member to manually enter a
corresponding audience member identification but also provides a visual status indicator
for showing which of the audience members have indicated that they are currently in the
receiver's audience. For example, this visual status indicator may comprise a plurality of
selectively illuminated light emitting diodes disposed on a box placed adjacent to a receiver and within the field of view of the audience members. The manual input device alternatively may be a battery-powered remote
control or other remote device that includes a keypad and an infra-red pulse transmitter
which permit an audience member to manually enter the member's identity and to transmit that identity by way of infra-red pulses to the measurement apparatus or other data
collector. The measurement apparatus or other data collector also provides a visual status indication as discussed above. An exemplary remote control of this type is disclosed by
Kiewit in U.S. Patent No. 4,876,736. Still other alternative devices which collect manually
entered audience member identification data and which use the receiver to indicate the
currently recorded audience status are known. The tuning data from the measurement apparatus and the audience member
identities from the manual input device are commonly time stamped with the times of each tuning event and/or of each change in audience composition. The time stamped tuning and
audience member records are then stored in a store and forward unit within the statistically selected location for subsequent forwarding to a data collection central office, such as on a
daily or other basis.
Because audience members forget from time to time to enter their identities, it is known to prompt the audience members to manually enter their identities.
However, it is well known in audience measurement that systems relying on prompting
signals sent to cooperating audience members must be concerned about the frequency of
those prompting signals. If a cooperating individual perceives the prompting signals as
being so frequent as to be annoying, he or she may stop cooperating. On the other hand, if
the prompting is too infrequent, the cooperating individual may forget to enter data at
appropriate times. McKenna et al., in U.S. Patent No. 4,816,904, discloses an arrangement in
which a prompting message is displayed on a television screen overlaid on viewer selected
programming by mixing the prompting message with the video signal being sent to the
display. However, McKenna et al. do not teach how to effectively regulate the prompting
frequency .
Therefore, the present invention is directed to the use of tuning and/or
audience response data in an 10 adaptive prompting algorithm to select the frequency with
which prompting occurs. Summary of the Invention In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a method of
prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an audience meter comprises the following: determining a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver; prompting the audience member to enter the
audience member identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver is less than a threshold; and, suppressing prompting of the
audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a method of
prompting an audience member to enter 15 an audience member identification into an
audience meter comprises the following: determining a variable as a function of a number
of times that the audience member was in an audience of a receiver and a number of times
that the receiver was turned on; prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification if the variable is not greater than a threshold; and, suppressing
prompting of the audience member if the variable is greater than the threshold.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the present invention, a method of
prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an
audience meter comprises the following: prompting the audience member to enter the
audience member identification at intermittent prompting occasions; at each prompting occasion, determining a likelihood based upon past audience composition and tuning
habits that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver; and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the determination made at a corresponding
prompting occasion indicates that it is likely that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver.
In accordance with still another aspect of the present invention, a method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an
audience meter comprises the following: applying a heuristic to determine whether the
audience member is in an audience of a receiver; counting the audience members in the
audience of the receiver to produce a count; prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification if the heuristic indicates that the audience member is not
in the audience of the receiver and if the count is not equal a number of logged in audience
members; and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the heuristic indicates
that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver and if the count is equal the
number of logged in audience members.
In accordance with a further aspect of the present invention, a method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an audience meter comprises the following: determining a probability that the audience
member is in an audience of a receiver based upon both tuning history and tuning style;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification 15 if the
probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver is less than a
threshold; and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater than the threshold.
In accordance with a still further aspect of the present invention, a method
of prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an
audience meter comprises the following: determining a variable as a function of a number
of times that the audience member was in an audience of a receiver and a number of times
that the receiver was turned on; determining a probability that the audience member is in
an audience of a receiver based upon tuning style; prompting the audience member to
enter the audience member identification if the variable is not greater than a first threshold
and if the probability is not greater than a second threshold; and, suppressing prompting of
the audience member if the variable is greater than the threshold and if the probability is
greater than a second threshold.
Brief Description of the Drawings
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will
become more apparent from a detailed consideration of the invention when taken in
conjunction with the drawings in which:
Figure 1 is a schematic diagram of an audience measurement system in
accordance with an exemplary 20 embodiment the present invention; Figure 2 is a schematic diagram of an audience measurement apparatus of
the audience measurement system shown in Figure 1 ;
Figure 3 is a schematic diagram of a data storage I 5 and forwarding unit of
the audience measurement system shown in Figure 1 ;
Figures 4A and 4B form a flow chart of a prompting program that may be
used in connection with the audience measurement system of Figure 1 ; and,
Figures 5 - 8 are tables of exemplary data useful in the explanation of the
operation of the audience measurement system of Figure 1.
Detailed Description of the Invention
As shown in Figure 1 , an audience measurement system 10 is provided at a
statistically selected location 12 in which known audience members are present. The
statistically selected location 12, for example, may be a household. The audience
measurement system 10 includes a portable remote control device 14 which controls a
receiver 16. The receiver 16, for example, may be a television receiver as shown in Figure
1 , although the receiver 16 could instead be a radio, a computer, or any other receiver that
is capable of being tuned to programs distributed over the air, over cable, by way of
satellite, or by way of other communication methodology to the statistically selected
location 12.
The portable remote control device 14 may have a user interface such as a
keypad which includes buttons to allow an audience member to enter channel numbers, to
change channels up and down, to increase and decrease volume, to mute the receiver 16,
and to turn the receiver 16 on and off. Thus, the portable remote control device 14 can be used from a remote position 18 in order to change the channel, volume level, and so on of the receiver 16.
The keypad of the portable remote control device may also permit audience
members to identify themselves when they are in the audience of the receiver 16. The
names and appropriate demographic information of each of the audience members may be
associated with a corresponding one of the buttons of the keypad and may be suitably
stored in an appropriate memory. Accordingly, when an audience member presses a button
for identification purposes, the time and date of the press, the appropriate identification, and the appropriate demographic information may be stored with the corresponding tuning
data.
The audience measurement system 10 is arranged to log data on audience membership (hereinafter "audience member identification data"). The audience measurement system 10 may be arranged to also log tuning data regarding the programs
and/or channels to which the receiver 16 is tuned. Periodically, the logged data is
transmitted over a network 20 to a data collection central office 22. The network 20 may be any mechanism for conveying the logged data to the data collection central office 22.
For example, the network 20 may be a public switched telephone network, as is
conventional practice in the audience measurement art.
The portable remote control device 14 may be used to enter member
identification data into a measurement apparatus 24 which is installed adjacent to the
receiver 16. The measurement apparatus 24 may also be arranged to acquire tuning data
from the receiver 16 in any conventional manner in addition to the audience member identification data acquired from the portable remote control device 14. Additionally or alternatively, the audience member identification data may be entered by devices other
than the portable remote control device 14. For example, a Peoplemeter® may be used to
enter member identification data into the measurement apparatus 24 as discussed above.
Additionally or alternatively, the audience member identification data may be entered by
use of switches mounted directly on the measurement apparatus 24, or the audience member identification data may be entered into the measurement apparatus 24 by use of an
electronic program guide (EPG). If an EPG is used, the EPG may also be used to enter
tuning data into the measurement apparatus 24. The acquired tuning and audience member identification data can be communicated to the data collection central office 22 by
a variety of techniques known to those skilled in the art.
The audience measurement system 10 includes a data storage and
forwarding unit 26 which collects the tuning and audience member identification data from the measurement apparatus 24 and which stores the tuning and audience member identification data until a scheduled forwarding time when the tuning and audience
member identification data are forwarded to the data collection central office 22. The data
storage and forwarding unit 26 may also store and forward tuning and audience member
identification data collected from a measurement apparatus, similar to the measurement
apparatus 24, associated with each of the other receivers (not shown) located in the
statistically selected location 12. The audience measurement system 10, the measurement
apparatus 24, and/or the data storage and forwarding unit 26 may be referred to herein as
an audience meter . The measurement apparatus 24 can comprise logic and a memory so that
the current tuning data can be acquired and determined by the measurement apparatus 24
based upon channel selection inputs from the portable remote control device 14.
Alternatively or additionally, the measurement apparatus 24 may receive a signal replica from a signal detector 34. For example, this signal detector 34 may be in the
form of a video signal source detector such as that disclosed by Chan, in issued U.S.
Patent Application Serial No. 08/654,309. This video signal source detector may be
positioned as taught in the Chan application to acquire a replica of a video signal from an input to a CRT of the receiver 16.
Alternatively or additionally, the signal detector 34 may be in the form of a microphone which acquires a replica of an audio output from a speaker of the receiver 16. Accordingly, the signal detector 34 is arranged to non-intrusively acquire from the receiver
16 a replica of the video and/or audio signal processed by the receiver 16.
The signal replica acquired by the signal detector 34 can then be processed
by the measurement apparatus 24 according to a variety of tuning measurement methodologies. For example, (i) an ancillary video and/or audio code (such as a source
identification (SID) code) identifying the tuned program or channel can be read from the
signal replica, if present, (ii) video and/or audio feature signatures characteristic of the
tuned program can be extracted from the signal replica and compared to reference
signatures in order to identify the program or channel, and/or (iii) the signal replica can be
correlated with a contemporary reference signal obtained by a reference scanning tuner
controlled by the measurement apparatus 24 in order to identify the program or channel. As a further alternative, the signal detector 34 may be arranged to detect the local
oscillator frequency of the receiver 16. This local oscillator frequency indicates the
channel to which the receiver 16 is tuned, as is known in the audience measurement art.
Moreover, whether or not the signal detector 34 is employed, the measurement
apparatus 24 may receive an ON/OFF input from an ON/OFF sensor 36. The ON/OFF
sensor 36, for example, may be an inductive sensor which determines that the receiver 16
is on by detecting the inductive signals emanating from the receiver 16. In the case where
the receiver 16 is a television receiver, the ON/OFF sensor 36 may be an inductive sensor
which, as is well known, determines that the receiver 16 is on by detecting the horizontal
retrace frequency of the CRT of the receiver 16. Alternatively, the ON/OFF sensor 36
may have a photodetector probe positioned in relation to the screen display of the receiver
16 so that changing light levels or the amount of light emanating from the screen display
can be used to indicate when the receiver 16 is on or off. Alternatively, the ON/OFF
sensor 36 can be any other type of sensor suitably arranged to determine the on/off status
of the receiver 16.
In controlling the receiver 16, the portable remote control device 14
preferably operates in the manner of a conventional universal remote control capable of
controlling two or more tuner appliances, such as a television receiver, a VCR, and/or a
cable converter. Such a universal remote control conventionally uses several different
code sets so that it can operate in multiple user-selected modes. One or more of these
modes can be used to transmit a tuning or other command (e.g., a fast forward command
sent to a VCR) to the currently active tuner (e.g., the tuner of receiver 16 or of a set-top
cable converter or of a VCR) controlling the receiver 16. In addition, one of the modes of the portable remote control device 14 is also used to transmit audience member
identification data to the measurement apparatus 24.
Optionally, the keypad of the portable remote control device 14 may be
provided with dedicated buttons associated with each of the audience members.
Accordingly, these dedicated buttons may be used by the audience members exclusively
for member identification.
The measurement apparatus 24 as shown in Figure 2 includes a
microprocessor 52 suitably connected to a transceiver 54, the signal detector 34, a ROM
56, a RAM 58, the ON/OFF sensor 36, and an interface 60. The transceiver 54, coupled to
the microprocessor 52 executing a program stored in the ROM 56, is used to receive
tuning status and/or audience member identification data from the portable remote control
device 14. The tuning status data, along with the current audience member identification
data and a time stamp, are temporarily saved in the RAM 58. Optionally or alternatively,
the measurement apparatus 24 may also respond to the signal detector 34, as discussed
above, in order to identify the tuned program from codes, signatures, or correlations, or to
determine the tuned channel such as by detecting the local oscillator frequency of the
receiver 16. This information can be temporarily stored in the RAM 58. The
measurement apparatus 24 additionally may be arranged to determine the ON/OFF status
of the receiver 16 from the ON/OFF sensor 36. The ON/OFF status of the receiver 16 is
used as discussed below in the prompting of audience members to enter their
identifications by use of the portable remote control device 14 (or otherwise) in
accordance with a prompting program described below. As discussed above, the measurement apparatus 24 transmits the ON/OFF, tuning, and audience member
identification data to the data storage and forwarding unit 26 by means of the interface 60.
Accordingly, the measurement apparatus 24 through execution by the
microprocessor 52 of a program stored in the ROM 56 acquires and/or determines tuning
data associated with the tuning of the receiver 16 and temporarily stores this tuning data in
the RAM 58. The measurement apparatus 24 also acquires and/or determines the ON/OFF
status of the receiver 16 and temporarily stores this status in the RAM 58. Moreover, the
measurement apparatus 24 receives audience member identification data and temporarily
stores this data in the RAM 58. The measurement apparatus 24 through use of the
interface 60 communicates any or all of this data to the data storage and forwarding unit
26. For example, the measurement apparatus 24 may communicate this data to the data
storage and forwarding unit 26 immediately upon acquisition.
As shown in Figure 3, the data storage and forwarding unit 26 includes a
microprocessor 82 suitably coupled to an interface 84, a ROM 86, a RAM 88, and an
interface 90. The interface 84 and the interface 60 support communications between the
measurement apparatus 24 and the data storage and forwarding unit 26, and the interface
90 supports commumcation between the data storage and forwarding unit 26 and the data
collection central office 22 as discussed above.
The ROM 86 stores a program 100 represented by the flow chart shown in
Figures 4A and 4B in order to collect and forward tuning and audience member
identification data from each measurement apparatus 24 associated with a corresponding
receiver 16 in the statistically selected location 12 and to provide prompting instructions to
audience members through the appropriate measurement apparatus 24 so as prompt the audience members to identify themselves. The prompting management implemented by
the 15 program 100 relies on audience participation history of each possible audience
member, by receiver and by source identification (SID) class. A SID is an ancillary code
that is inserted into programs so as to identify the programs or their sources.
Other technologies, such as navigation characteristics, may provide
valuable information for prompt management. Navigation characteristics indicate the manner in which certain audience members tune the receiver 16. For example, one of the
audience members may channel surf. Thus, any time that channel surfing is detected, the
probability that the channel surfing audience member is in the audience may be increased. The program 100 is particularly useful where the measurement apparatus 24 cannot clearly
detect channel changes.
An instance of the program 100 as shown in Figures 4 A and 4B may be provided at the data storage and forwarding unit 26 for each of the receivers at the
statistically selected location 12. Alternatively, the program 100 as shown in Figures 4 A and 4B may be arranged to execute at the data storage and forwarding unit 26 and to
accommodate all of the receivers at the statistically selected location 12. As a further
alternative, an instance of the program 100 may be provided at the measurement apparatus
24 associated with each of the receivers at the statistically selected location 12 .
As shown in Figure 4 A, when the program 100 receives data indicating that
the receiver 16 has been turned on, the program 100 at a block 102 acquires tuning data
related to the receiver 16 and stores that data in the RAM88. At a block 104, the program
100 instructs the appropriate measurement apparatus 24 to immediately prompt the audience members in the audience of the receiver 16 to identify themselves. This prompting may be effected by on-screen displays on the receiver 16, by a visible display
provided by the measurement apparatus 24 or the portable remote control device 14, by an
audible message provided by the measurement apparatus 24 or the portable remote control
device 14, etc.
The responsive audience member identification data is received at a block
106. In the case where the audience member identification data is provided by the
portable remote control device 14 and the program 100 is executing at the data storage and
forwarding unit 26, this audience member identification data is received through use of the
transceiver 54 and is communicated to the data storage and forwarding unit 26 by the
measurement apparatus 24. Alternatively, the measurement apparatus 24 may be provided
with input keys, switches, and the like in which case the measurement apparatus 24
receives the audience member identification data directly and communicates to the data
storage and forwarding unit 26. The program 100 at a block 108 stores the audience
member identification data in the RAM 58 or the RAM 88, as appropriate, and, at a block
110, also updates the SID class tables as appropriate.
These tables are used by the data storage and forwarding unit 26 to
maintain a running accumulator of audience composition. The running accumulator is a
count of the number of times each audience member logs onto each of the receivers 16 in
the statistically selected location 12 and is maintained by time period and by class of SID
code.
The table of Figure 5 illustrates a single month's accumulation of data for a
single household for all SID classes. As the table of Figure 5 indicates, days are broken
into day parts. The table is further broken into the various audience members present in the statistically selected location 12, and the table further breaks down each audience
member by receiver. As shown in Figure 5, the audience members are indicated by their
sex and age, and the receivers are indicated by their location (such as bedroom, living
room, and kitchen). However, instead of sex and age, other identifiers such as names may
be used to identify the audience members, which may be particularly useful where
multiple members having the same sex and roughly the same age are present at the
statistically selected location 12. Moreover, receiver location identities other that
bedroom, living room, and kitchen may be assigned to the receivers used in the
statistically selected location 12, which may be particularly useful where there are multiple
rooms of the same room type in the statistically selected location 12.
The exemplary data provided in the table of Figure 5 indicates, for
example, that the 35-49 year old female audience member used the receiver in the
bedroom eighteen 10 times to receive programs at 6:00 AM during the month covered by
the table of Figure 5, that the 35-49 year old female audience member used the receiver in
the bedroom nineteen times to receive programs at 6:30 AM during the month covered by
the table of Figure 5, that the 35-49 year old female audience member used the receiver in
the bedroom twenty-two times to receive programs at 7:00 AM during the month covered
by the table of Figure 5, that the 35-49 year old female audience member used the receiver
in the bedroom twenty-one times to receive programs at 7:30 AM during the month
covered by the table of Figure 5, and so on. The table holds similar data for the other
audience members at the statistically selected location 12 and for other day parts.
The tuning occasions section of the table stores data related to how many
times during each day part each receiver 16 at the statistically selected location 12 was used, regardless of the number of audience members in the audience of that receiver
during that time and month. Thus, for example, the 35-49 year old female audience
member used the receiver in the bedroom eighteen times to receive programs at 6:00 AM
during the month covered by the table of Figure 5, and the 35-49 year old male audience
member used the receiver in the bedroom one time to receive a program at 6:00 AM
during the month covered by the table of Figure 5. However, there were only eighteen
tuning occasions during which the receiver in the bedroom was used at 6:00 AM for the
relevant month, because the 35-49 year old female audience member and the 35-49 year
old male audience member used the receiver in the bedroom at 6:00 AM on the same day
during the month covered by the table of Figure 5.
As another example, the 35-49 year old female audience member used the
receiver in the living room eight times to receive programs at 6:00 PM during the month
covered by the table of Figure 5, the 35-49 year old male audience member used the
receiver in the living room one time to receive a program at 6:00 PM during the month
covered by the table of Figure 5, and the 12-17 year old female audience member used the
receiver in the living room fourteen times to receive programs at 6:00 PM during the
month covered by the table of Figure 5. However, there were only fifteen times that the
receiver in the living room was on with someone in the audience during the 6:00 PM day
part for the relevant month, because on several occasions there were more than one
audience members in the audience of the living receiver during that day part. Thus, there
were only fifteen tuning occasions during which the receiver in the living room was used
at the 6:00 PM day part for the relevant month. The counts section of the table stores data related to the sum of the data by
receiver and day part for the relevant month. Thus, for example, the 35-49 year old female
audience member used the receiver in the bedroom eighteen times to receive programs at
6:00 AM during the month covered by the table of Figure 5, and the 35-49 year old male
audience member used the receiver in the bedroom one time to receive a program at 6:00
AM during the month covered by the table of Figure 5. Thus, the count for the bedroom
receiver is 18 + 1 = 19 for the 6:00 AM day part for the relevant month.
As another example, the 35-49 year old female audience member used the
receiver in the living room eight times to receive programs at 6:00 PM during the month
covered by the table of Figure 5, the 35-49 year old male audience member used the
receiver in the living room one time to receive a program at 6:00 PM during the month
covered by the table of Figure 5, and the 12-17 year old female audience member used the
receiver in the living room fourteen times to receive programs at 6:00 PM during the
month covered by the table of Figure 5. Thus, the count for the living room receiver is 8 +
1 + 14 = 23 for the 6:00 PM day part for the relevant month.
The data in the table of Figure 5 do not show any SID-specific information,
but instead represent a marginal layer collapsing over all SID codes. Data collapsing is
useful whenever insufficient data has been collected upon which to make predictions about
the audience members in the audience of a receiver at a given day part. For example, data
collapsing is particularly useful during the first few months of initial data collection
because insufficient data is likely to have been collected upon which to make predictions
about the audience members in the audience of a receiver at a given day part. The table shown in Figure 5 is only exemplary of the way in which the data
may be stored. The data alternatively could be stored in an accumulator table for all sets
in the household. This accumulator table is incremented each time there is a change in
tuning status or audience composition and includes data for every person, time period, set,
and SID class. Thus, the accumulator table may simply log each tuning event and each
audience composition event in chronological order.
As a further alternative, such an accumulator table may be used to store
data as they are accumulated during a month and then transferred to the type of month
table shown in Figure 5 at the end of the relevant month. Other alternatives are also
possible.
The tables store the basic information which is evaluated for each receiver
prior to a scheduled prompt. These tables maintained by the measurement apparatus 24 or
the data storage and forwarding unit 26 preferably includes four separate tables, a table for
the current month, a table for the current month - 1, a table for the current month - 2, and a
total of all months up to and including the current month - 3. These tables permit a
variable weighting of data by recency of behavior which may be used, for example, during
data collapsing.
Thus, this recency weighting is accomplished by combining all four month
tables on a weighted basis into a 10 master table that is used for each receiver to determine
whether or not to deliver the scheduled prompt to the audience at that receiver. For
example, if the recency weights are 2.1, 0.3, 0.3, 0.3, then every cell in the four month tables described above
would be combined, giving a 15 weight of 2.1 to the data in the current month table and
equal weights of 0.3 to the data in the other three tables.
The program 100 at a block 112 determines whether it is time to evaluate
the data in the tables discussed above. For example, the block 112 may use an elapsed
time timer such that the block 112 determines that it is time to perform its evaluation when
the elapsed time timer accumulates an amount of time T. The time T between evaluations
may be set to 42 minutes or any other number of minutes which is deemed appropriate.
Accordingly, at T after the receiver 16 has initially been turned on, the program 100 at the
block 112 initiates an evaluation of the data stored in the tables to determine if prompting
should be suppressed. Thus, a prompt will be given after the passage of T unless the
evaluation indicates that prompting should be suppressed.
The evaluation is a probability-based heuristic. 10 The tuning and audience
composition history at the statistically selected location 12 is mathematically summarized
and represented in multidimensional tables of counts. Each time a prompt is scheduled to
be delivered, this information is evaluated, and, if the mathematical structure of audience
composition in the household is such that the probability of a specific audience
composition exceeds a certain threshold value, then the prompt is suppressed.
The heuristic is an algorithm for parsimoniously summarizing and
retrieving knowledge stored in the tables. In a densely populated table, the simplest
algorithm would search the cell most similar to the current condition, compute
straightforward probabilities for each, and, if the probability of a single tuning composition exceeded a certain threshold, the prompt would be suppressed until the next
cycle.
The objective is to determine audience composition. Rather than treating
this determination as a problem in combinatorics, this determination may be treated as a
problem of individual tuning at a receiver, by SID and day part, but including terms that
include co-receiving history and current response to an alternate receiver (co-location).
The operation of the heuristic may be illustrated with the sample frequency
tables shown in Figures 6, 1, and 8. The tables shown in Figures 6 and 7 correspond to the frequency tables for two SID classifications, SID 11 and SID 12. These SID classes, for
example, divide the programs by program type such as daytime drama, prime time drama, sports which can be further broken down into subtypes such as football, baseball, etc. Accordingly, Each SID may be assigned to one of these classes. The table in Figure 8
contains a total of the data in the monthly tables (in the example here, the total of the data in the tables of Figures 6 and 7).
If the block 112 determines that it is time to make an evaluation (e.g., time
T has passed since the last prompt decision), a block 114 determines whether the number
of persons who have logged in (i.e., identified themselves as being in the audience) equals
the number of persons who have been counted in the audience. Counting of persons may
be implemented by using electric eyes, proximity, or other sensing to count the audience
members as they enter and leave a reception area associated with the receiver 16. A
counter 90 is shown in Figure 1 for this purpose. The measurement apparatus 24 collects
count information from the counter 90 and passes this count information to the data
storage and forwarding unit 26 as appropriate. If the block 114 determines that the number of persons who have logged in is not equal to the number of persons who have
been counted in the audience, a block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience
members at the receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100.
On the other hand, if the block 114 determines that the number of persons
who have logged in is equal to the number of persons who have been counted in the
audience, a block 118 determines a variable NUMBER as a result of dividing a data value
COUNTS by a data value TUOCC. The data value COUNTS is taken from the counts
row, at the receiver location, during the day part, and for the SID class corresponding to
the current day part and the current SID of the program being received by the receiver
corresponding to the program 100. For example, if the current day part is 6:30 AM if the
SID from the program being received by the appropriate receiver is in SID class 11, and if
the appropriate receiver is the bedroom receiver, the data value for COUNTS is 19.
The data value TUOCC is taken from the tuning occasions row, at the
receiver location, during the day part, and for the SID class corresponding to the current
day part and the current SID of the program being received by the receiver corresponding
to the program 100. For example, if the current day part is 6:30 AM, if the SID from the
program being received by the appropriate receiver is in SID class 11, and if the
appropriate receiver is the bedroom receiver, the data value for TUOCC is 19.
Therefore, the variable NUMBER is determined as 19/19 = 1.0. If either
the numerator or denominator which is used to determine the variable NUMBER falls
below a
predetermined threshold, it may be necessary to collapse each cell in the tables from right
to left (SID, and then receiver) until this threshold is reached because there are otherwise insufficient data in the SID tables on which a prediction can be based. Following such
data collapsing, the variable NUMBER may be recomputed.
A block 120 determines whether the variable NUMBER exceeds a
corresponding threshold. If the variable NUMBER does not exceeds the corresponding
threshold, the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience members at the
receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100. On the other hand, if the variable
NUMBER exceeds the corresponding threshold, a block 122 rounds NUMBER to the
nearest integer and compares the rounded NUMBER to the current persons count. This
current persons count may be derived, for example, by summing the number of audience
members who have logged into the measurement apparatus 24 at the receiver 16
corresponding to the program 100. Alternatively, the current persons count may be
derived by using the sensing described above to count the audience members as they enter
and leave a reception area associated with the receiver 16. If the rounded NUMBER is
different than the current persons count, the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to
the audience members at the receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100.
On the other hand, if the rounded NUMBER is not different than the
current persons count, the variable NUMBER is consistent with history as represented by
the data in the tables so that the audience members can be further evaluated by the
program 100. Therefore, if the rounded NUMBER is not different than the current persons
count, a block 124 sets a variable PREDICTED PERSON equal to the person having the
maximum probability of being in the audience of the receiver 16 corresponding to the
program 100. For example, using the tables of Figures 6-8 and as described above, the
person having the maximum probability of being in the audience of the bedroom receiver at the current time (6:00 AM + T) watching a program in SID class 11 is the 35-49 year
old female. Therefore, the variable PREDICTED PERSON is set to the 35-49 year old
female.
Also, the block 124 computes the probability that the PREDICTED
PERSON (the 35-49 year old female in the example) is in the audience by dividing the
number of times the 35-49 year old female tuned into a program having the relevant SID
class and during the current day part by the count for that SID class and day part. For example, the probability that the 35-49 year old female is in the audience of the bedroom
receiver which is tuned to a program having the SID class 11 at and during the current time (6:00 AM + T) is 19/20 using the table of Figure 6. This probability 19/20 may be
adjusted by a lead-in adjustment factor FLI. This lead in factor FLI is used to adjust the computed probability when the PREDICTED PERSON was in the audience of the relevant receiver during the immediately preceding day part. This lead in factor FLI may be a
predetermined number set to a suitable value greater than one and is multiplied by the computed probability in order to increase the computed probability.
Following the processing at the block 124, the program 100 at a block 126
determines whether the probability calculated at the block 124 is less than a predetermined
threshold. If the probability calculated at the block 124 is less than this predetermined
threshold, the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience members at the
receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100. It is noted that there may be insufficient
data in the tables at this point during the execution of the program 100, in which case the
data may be collapsed as indicated above. However, if the data is so collapsed, it is likely that the probability calculated at the block 124 is less than a predetermined threshold, so
that it is correspondingly likely that a prompt will be permitted.
On the other hand, if the probability calculated at the block 124 is not less
than the predetermined threshold, the program 100 at a block 128 determines whether the
audience member, who is in the audience of the receiver 16 corresponding to the program
100 and who has entered his or her identification into the corresponding measurement
apparatus 24, is the PREDICTED PERSON. If the audience member, who is in the
audience of the receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100 and who has entered his or
her identification into the corresponding measurement apparatus 24, is not the
PREDICTED PERSON, the block 116 permits the prompt to be given to the audience
members at the receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100.
On the other hand, if the audience member, who is in the audience of the
receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100 and who has entered his or her identification
into the corresponding measurement apparatus 24, is the PREDICTED PERSON, then the
program 100 at a block 130 suppresses prompting.
After the block 116 permits the prompt to be given 10 to the audience
members at the receiver 16 corresponding to the program 100, or after the block 130
suppresses prompting, the elapsed time timer used by the block 116 is reset, and the
program 100 returns to the block 116 in order to repeat the execution of blocks 112-130 at
6:00 AM + 2T and at each increment of T thereafter.
At a particular time during the day, the data storage and forwarding unit 26
communicates its stored tuning and audience member identification data to the data
collection central office 22. Other events may also be used by the block 116 of the program 100 to
trigger prompts. Such other events include, for example, a channel change when no
audience member is logged in, the passage of a predetermined number of days when a
particular household member has not logged in, the passage of a predetermined number of
days when a short term visitor has not logged in, no log ins when the receiver 16 is turned
on, no log ins of particular household members (such as children) when the receiver 16 is
tuned to particular programs (such as children's programming), and the like.
As described above, navigation characteristics may provide valuable
information for prompt management. Navigation characteristics indicate the manner in
which certain audience members tune the receiver 16. Thus, in the same way that tuning
to individual programs or tuning during specific day parts or on specific sets may be
correlated with a particular household member as described above, tuning styles may also
be associated with individual household members. Accordingly, when tuning patterns are
evaluated, the styles in which people select their programs may also be evaluated.
Tuning styles can be described by a variety of terms depending on which
paradigm is being used to conceptualize receiver tuning. Tuning styles can be considered
to mean or include "navigational patterns", "biometric signatures," or "keystroke
dynamics." These styles can be characterized by some very simple "statistics" or by more
complex forms of representing knowledge.
"Statistics" are formally defined by mathematicians as a mathematical
projection of a vector or set of data onto a single or simple set of parameters. Thus,
statistics are used, in effect, to summarize data. A mean is an example of a statistic which
may be used to summarize a set of data. However, in summarizing data, certain knowledge about the data, such as variance, kurtosis, skew, and, of course, the exact value
of each data point, is lost. Therefore, the statistics used to summarize the data may or may
not be sufficient.
"Sufficiency" in theoretical statistics refers to the ability of a "statistic" to
reproduce the required detail of a data distribution. In some households, a simple statistic
can "sufficiently" represent tuning style. One such statistic is the average number of
stations or programs tuned per time period. For example, if one audience member views
"appointment television" (i.e, an audience member tunes to a channel carrying a selected
program and stays on that channel throughout most or all of the selected program), the
average number of stations "hit" per half hour will be very small. But if another audience
member is a "surfer," the average number of "hits" per half hour will be much, much
larger. While summaries of the tuning habits of these audience members may cause
knowledge of variance and skew to be lost, the sheer difference between the average
velocities (average rate of channel change) of these two audience members is sufficient to
distinguish between these audience members. Thus, in this example, the mean rate of Δ is
sufficient to identify the individual.
However, in some households, there may be several members that have the
same average rate of channel changing (velocity). In this case, the only way to distinguish
these households is to consider channel velocity along with other parameters of tuning
which might provide "sufficiency" in order to identify the recent presence of a household
member.
For example, for every time period T (e.g., Vi hr), the average number of channels
tuned during that half hour may be recorded and stored in the tables of Figures 6-8 for every individual logged on to a receiver. However, velocity may not be sufficient to
distinguish between people whose "instantaneous rate of change", often called
acceleration, is different. For example, two people may average twenty channel hits per
half hour with one of the people methodically surfing by watching every other hit for a
minute or two, while the other of the two people surfs through twenty channels, finds an
appealing program, and then watches for a half hour. The average velocity is not a
sufficient statistic to distinguish these two audience members. However, their acceleration
can be used to distinguish between them.
There are several statistics that can represent "acceleration." An exemplary
statistic to represent acceleration is given by the following description. If it assumed that
the time period is thirty, minutes, the following ratio may be used to characterize
acceleration:
# of channels in past 30 minutes
# of minutes in which channel was changed in past 30 minutes
For example, if twenty channels were hit in ten separate minutes of tuning, then the
acceleration is 20/10 or a modest 2. On the other hand, if twenty channels were hit in two
minutes of surfing, then the acceleration is 20/2 or a moderate ten.
In some homes, even "acceleration" may not be sufficient to distinguish
between audience members. For example, it may be the case that where an audience
member surfs in a program or channel space is the key to distinguishing between two
audience members. Therefore, in such households, a learning heuristic can be used to
classify the "cluster of channels" that an audience member surfs and to match this surfing
cluster to the "clusters of programs" to which an audience member tunes. Accordingly, classification and matching may be done specifically to distinguish between the channel-
surfing patterns of two audience members with similar velocity and acceleration histories .
Accordingly, the probability determined at the block 124 can be adjusted up
or down by velocity, acceleration, and/or program clustering. Alternatively, any
combination of these factors can be included in the program 100 as one or more decision
blocks.
Certain parameters used by the program 100 may be downloadable from
the data collection central office 22 to the measurement apparatus 24 or the data storage
and forwarding unit 26 and stored in the RAM 58 or the RAM 88. For example, the
parameter T may be downloaded.
Certain modifications of the present invention have been discussed above.
Other modifications will occur to those practicing in the art of the present invention. For
example, it is noted that the portable remote control device 14 may function in several
different modes as described above. However, each of these modes may use a separate
corresponding remote control.
Also, the present invention as described above relies on the use of certain
infrared transceivers. However, it will be appreciated that other signaling modes, such as
ultrasonic or spread-spectrum radio, could instead be employed.
In addition, the present invention as described above relies on the use of
transceivers. Instead, a separate receiver and transmitter could be used in place of each
transceiver.
Moreover, as discussed above, instead of executing the program 100 at the
data storage and forwarding unit 26, the program 100 can be executed at each measurement apparatus 24 within the statistically selected location 12. In this case, the
data storage tables shown in Figures 5-8 may be modified by eliminating the receiver
category. Also in this case, the storing and forwarding function performed by the data
storage and forwarding unit 26 can be performed by the measurement apparatus 24 so that the data storage and forwarding unit 26 can be eliminated.
Furthermore, as described above, the portable remote control device 14
according to the first embodiment 15 of the invention transmits tuning commands which are received by both the controlled tuner and by the measurement apparatus 24. The
controlled tuner responds by effecting the tuning indicated by the tuning command, and the measurement apparatus 24 responds by recording the tuning event. Instead, in
accordance with the teachings of U.S. Patent No. 4,876,736, the portable remote control device 14 may be arranged to transmit tuning commands using codes recognized by the
measurement apparatus 24 but not by the tuner of the receiver 16. Thus, the measurement apparatus 24 records the tuning event, converts the code into a form recognized by the
tuner of the receiver 16, and passes the converted tuning command on to the tuner of the
receiver 16.
Also, a different portable remote control device could be assigned to each
person in the household (with additional portable remote control devices provided to
visitors). Each person would then carry his or her portable remote control device within
the household. The individual's portable remote control device 14 can then be arranged to
periodically transit an identification signal to the measurement apparatus 24 either based
upon time increments or based upon a command issued by the measurement apparatus 24. Moreover, the prompting permitted by the block 116 may have multiple
levels. For example, at the lowest level, the initial prompt could be flashed for 10 seconds.
If the audience responds appropriately, the program 100 resumes normal execution. If the
audience does not respond appropriately within a predetermined amount of time (e.g. 20
seconds), and the prompt is flashed for 20 seconds at a higher flash rate. If the audience responds appropriately, the program 100 resumes normal execution. If the audience still
does not respond appropriately, the block 116 may be arranged to provide an audible tone
or a voice command. Different and/or additional levels of prompting may be provided.
In addition, it may be deemed desirable for audience members to manually update audience composition without prompting as changes in audience composition
occur. Prompting serves mainly as a fail-safe, when sufficient time has elapsed without any unprompted change. Therefore, the elapsed time timer used by the block 116 may be
reset at each entry of any audience member identification data whether prompted or not. As an additional contingency, the interval T between prompts could be
lengthened or shortened in order to reinforce timely entry of audience changes. This
adjustment of T could be based on the data entry performance of audience members. For
example, if a particular audience member typically waits until a prompt appears before
reporting an earlier audience change, then the data record will show an improbably high
proportion of reported audience changes coinciding with the appearance of the prompt. If
this pattern of performance is observed, the program 100 may shorten the interval T
between prompts. Shortening the interval T between prompts will tend to reduce any possible lags between the occurrence and reporting of audience changes, as well as to provide a mild negative reinforcement for audience members who fail to report audience
changes as they occur.
Alternatively or additionally, it is possible that 10 audience members will
report audience changes when they occur and that the intervals T between prompts are
shorter than the interval during which no audience change actually occurs. If this pattern
is observed, it may be that the prompting interval T is shorter than required for this
audience member. In this instance, the program 100 may lengthen the interval T between
prompts in order to provide a positive reinforcement. Indeed, different prompting
intervals T could be set for various audience members, depending on their previous
performance.
Furthermore, the heuristic of the present invention as described above relies upon
the representation of tuning history and/or style knowledge in the form of a series of
probability tables. Such knowledge, however, can be represented in other forms. For
example, as receiver tuning events occur, data relating to these events could be stored in a
covariance matrix which could then be evaluated through regression, discriminant, or other
parametric techniques which would develop prediction scores for each potential household
member. Similarly, non-parametric techniques for representing knowledge, such as
weighted digraphs, may be used to represent such knowledge. Conceptually, the heuristic
has been described above using the simplest form of knowledge representation. However,
an important element of the heuristic is its capacity to manage user prompts or questions
regardless of how such tuning histories (knowledge) are represented.
Also, as viewed from the standpoint of a meter, audience members have
features: what programs they watch, when they watch, with whom they watch, where they watch, and how they change channels. In some households, one or two of these statistics
may suffice to discriminate between audience members. In other households, at certain
times of day, many of these statistics may be required. Thus, in a more advanced form of
the heuristic described above, aperiodic analysis could be conducted in each household to
evaluate the structure, among household members, of each of these features. For example,
in a two-person household, one person may surf while the other tunes by appointment.
This household would be highly structured with respect to acceleration. In this case, the
negentropy, or information content (h2) of acceleration, is very high. In an advanced
heuristic, the values of each of these features would be weighted by their information
content, that is, their ability to discriminate among audience members.
In addition, specific hardware is described in relation to Figures 1, 2, and 3.
However, it should be understood that other hardware and/or software arrangements may
be used to implement the present invention.
Accordingly, the description of the present invention is to be construed as
illustrative only and is for the purpose of teaching those skilled in the art the best mode of
carrying out the invention. The details may be varied substantially without departing from
the spirit of the invention, and the exclusive use of all modifications which are within the
scope of the appended claims is reserved.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS: 1. A method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience
member identification into an audience meter comprising:
determining a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less than a threshold; and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater than the threshold.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification; prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification;
and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount of time from a previous prompting decision.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises:
if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification;
and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
5. The method of claim 1 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member
has already entered the audience member identification.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the determination of the probability
that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver comprises determining the
probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver based upon a
number of times that the audience member has been in the audience of the receiver during
a corresponding day part.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the determination of the probability
that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver comprises determining the
probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver based upon a
program being received by the receiver during the corresponding day part.
9. The method of claim 7 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
10. The method of claim 7 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount of time from a previous prompting decision.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises:
if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determimng whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member
has already entered the audience member identification.
12. The method of claim 7 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
tine from the initial prompting.
13. The method of claim 12 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises:
if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
14. The method of claim 1 further comprising:
storing audience identification data in tables;
collapsing the tables if the tables contain insufficient data to make a
prompting decision.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein the collapsing of the tables is
weighted depending upon age of the audience member identification data.
16. A method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience
member identification into an audience meter comprising:
determining a variable as a function of a number of times that the audience member was in an audience of a receiver and a number of times that the receiver was
turned on;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification if the variable is not greater than a threshold; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the variable is greater than the threshold.
17. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined day part and a number
of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined day part.
18. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined day part over a
predetermined amount of time and a number of times that the receiver was turned on
during the predetermined day part over the predetermined amount of time.
19. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined amount of time and a
number of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined amount of time.
20. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a predetermined day part and by a SID and a
number of times that the receiver was turned on by the predetermined day part and by the
SID.
21. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a predetermined day part over a
predetermined amount of time and by a SID and a number of times that the receiver was
turned on during the predetermined day part over the predetermined amount of time and
by the SID.
22. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined amount of time and by a SID and a number of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined
amount oftime and by the SID.
23. The method of claim 16 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a SID and a number of times that the
receiver was turned on by the SID.
24. The method of claim 16 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises: determining a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a
receiver; prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less that a threshold; and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater that the threshold.
25. The method of claim 24 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
26. The method of claim 24 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount oftime from a previous prompting decision.
27. The method of claim 26 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold comprises:
if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater than the threshold, determining whether, the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
28. The method of claim 24 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
29. The method of claim 28 wherein the suppression of prompting of the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater that the threshold, determining whether the audience member has already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
30. The method of claim 24 wherein the determination of the
probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver comprises
determining the probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver based upon a number of times that the audience member has been in the audience of the
receiver during a corresponding day part.
31. The method of claim 30 wherein the determination of the
probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver comprises
determining the probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver
based upon a program being received by the receiver during the corresponding day part.
32. The method of claim 30 wherein the suppression of prompting of the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater that the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification.
33. The method of claim 30 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount oftime from a previous prompting decision.
34. The method of claim 33 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold comprises:
if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification; and
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member
identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member
has already entered the audience member identification.
35. The method of claim 30 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
36. The method of claim 35 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold comprises: if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold, determimng whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification .
37. The method of claim 24 further comprising:
storing audience identification data in tables; collapsing the tables if the tables contain insufficient data to make a prompting decision.
38. The method of claim 37 wherein the collapsing of the tables is weighted depending upon age of the audience member identification data.
39. The method of claim 16 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount oftime from a previous prompting decision.
40. The method of claim 16 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and, executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
41. The method of claim 16 wherein the suppression of prompting
comprises:
if the variable is greater than the threshold, determining whether the
variable is equal to a current persons count;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the variable is not equal to the current persons count; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the variable is equal to
the current persons count.
42. The method of claim 41 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the variable is equal to the current persons count comprises:
if the variable is equal to the current persons count, determining a
probability that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less that a threshold; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater that the threshold.
43. The method of claim 42 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver is greater that the threshold comprises:
if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater that the threshold, determining whether the audience member has
already entered the audience member identification;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the audience member has not already entered the audience member identification; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the audience member has already entered the audience member identification.
44. A method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience member identification into an audience meter comprising:
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification at intermittent prompting occasions;
at each prompting occasion, determining a likelihood based upon past
audience composition and tuning habits that the audience member is in an audience of a
receiver; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the determination made
at a corresponding prompting occasion indicates that it is likely that the audience member
is in the audience of the receiver.
45. The method of claim 44 wherein the determination of likelihood
comprises determining a probability that the audience member is in the audience of the
receiver, and wherein the suppression of prompting comprises:
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less than a threshold; and, suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater than the threshold.
46. The method of claim 45 wherein the determination of a probability
comprises determining by day part the probability that the audience member is in the audience of a receiver.
47. The method of claim 45 wherein the determination of a probability
comprises determining by SID class the probability that the audience member is in the
audience of a receiver.
48. The method of claim 44 wherein the determination of likelihood
comprises determining a variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of a receiver and a number of times that the receiver was
turned on, and wherein the suppression of prompting comprises: prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the variable is not greater than a threshold; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the variable is greater
than the threshold.
49. The method of claim 48 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining by day part the variable as a function of the number of times that
the audience member was in the audience of the receiver and the number of times that the
receiver was turned on.
50. The method of claim 48 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining by SID class the variable as a function of the number of times that
the audience member was in the audience of the receiver and the number of times that the
receiver was turned on.
51. The method of claim 48 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the variable is greater than the threshold comprises:
if the variable is greater than the threshold, determining whether the
variable is equal to a current persons count;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the variable is not equal to the current persons count; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the variable is equal to
the current persons count.
52. The method of claim 51 wherein the suppression of prompting of
the audience member if the variable is equal to the current persons count comprises:
if the variable is equal to the current persons count, determimng a
probability that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less that a threshold; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater that the threshold.
53. The method of claim 44 wherein the intermittent prompting
occasions are nominally separated from one another by a period T, and wherein the
method further comprises varying the period T depending upon prior responses to the
prompting.
54. A method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience
member identification into an audience meter comprising:
applying a heuristic to determine whether the audience member is in an
audience of a receiver;
counting the audience members in the audience of the receiver to produce a
count; prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the heuristic indicates that the audience member is not in the audience of
the receiver and if the count is not equal a number of logged in audience members; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the heuristic indicates
that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver and if the count is equal the
number of logged in audience members.
55. The method of claim 54 wherein the application of a heuristic to
determine whether the audience member is in an audience of a receiver comprises
determimng a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a receiver,
wherein the prompting of the audience member to enter the audience member
identification comprises prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less than a threshold and if the count is not equal a number of logged in audience
members, and wherein the suppression of prompting of the audience member comprises
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the audience
member is in the audience of the receiver is greater than the threshold and if the count is
equal a number of logged in audience members.
56. The method of claim 55 wherein the determination of the
probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver comprises
determining the probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver based upon a number of times that the audience member has been in the audience of the
receiver during a corresponding day part.
57. The method of claim 54 wherein the application of a heuristic to
determine whether the audience member is in an audience of a receiver comprises
determining a variable as a function of a number of times that the audience member was in
an audience of a receiver and a number of times that the receiver was turned on, wherein
the prompting of the audience member to enter the audience member identification
comprises prompting the audience member to enter the audience member identification if
the variable is not greater than a threshold and if the count is not equal a number of logged
in audience members, and wherein the suppression of prompting of the audience member
comprises suppressing prompting of the audience member if the variable is greater than
the threshold and if the count is equal a number of logged in audience members.
58. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined day part and a number
of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined day part.
59. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined day part over a predetermined amount oftime and a number of times that the receiver was turned on
during the predetermined day part over the predetermined amount of time.
60. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined amount oftime and a
number of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined amount oftime.
61. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determimng the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a predetermined day part and by a SID and a
number of times that the receiver was turned on by the predetermined day part and by the
SID.
62. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a predetermined day part over a
predetermined amount oftime and by a SID and a number of times that the receiver was
turned on during the predetermined day part over the predetermined amount oftime and
by the SID.
63. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined amount oftime and by
a SID and a number of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined
amount oftime and by the SID.
64. The method of claim 57 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a SID and a number of times that the
receiver was turned on by the SID.
65. The method of claim 54 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount of time from a previous prompting decision.
66. The method of claim 54 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
67. The method of claim 54 further comprising:
storing audience identification data in tables; collapsing the tables if the
tables contain insufficient data to make a prompting decision.
68. A method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience
member identification into an audience meter comprising;
determining a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a
receiver based upon both tuning history and tuning style;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the probability that the audience member is in the audience of the receiver
is less than a threshold; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the probability that the
audience member is in the audience of the receiver is greater than the threshold.
69. The method of claim 68 wherein the tuning style comprises tuning
velocity.
70. The method of claim 68 wherein the tuning style comprises tuning
acceleration.
71. The method of claim 68 wherein the tuning style comprises tuning
velocity and tuning acceleration.
72. The method of claim 68 wherein the tuning style comprises
program clustering.
73. The method of claim 68 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount oftime from a previous prompting decision.
74. The method of claim 68 further comprising:
initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
75. The method of claim 68 wherein the determination of the
probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver comprises
determining the probability that the audience member is in an audience of the receiver
based upon a number of times that the audience member has been in the audience of the
receiver during a corresponding day part.
76. The method of claim 68 further comprising:
storing audience identification data in tables;
collapsing the tables if the tables contain insufficient data to make a
prompting decision.
77. A method of prompting an audience member to enter an audience
member identification into an audience meter comprising: determining a variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of a receiver and a number of times that the receiver was
turned on;
determining a probability that the audience member is in an audience of a
receiver based upon tuning style;
prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification if the variable is not greater than a first threshold and if the probability is not
greater than a second threshold; and,
suppressing prompting of the audience member if the variable is greater
than the threshold and if the probability is greater than a second threshold.
78. The method of claim 77 wherein the tuning style comprises tuning
velocity.
79. The method of claim 77 wherein the tuning style comprises tuning
acceleration.
80. The method of claim 77 wherein the tuning style comprises tuning
velocity and tuning acceleration.
81. The method of claim 77 wherein the tuning style comprises
program clustering.
82. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined day part and a number
of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined day part.
83. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined day part over a
predetermined amount oftime and a number of times that the receiver was turned on
during the predetermined day part over the predetermined amount oftime.
84. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined amount oftime and a
number of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined amount oftime.
85. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a predetermined day part and by a SID and a
number of times that the receiver was turned on by the predetermined day part and by the
SID.
86. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a predetermined day part over a
predetermined amount oftime and by a SID and a number of times that the receiver was
turned on during the predetermined day part over the predetermined amount oftime and
by the SID.
87. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver during a predetermined amount oftime and by
a SID and a number of times that the receiver was turned on during the predetermined
amount oftime and by the SID.
88. The method of claim 77 wherein the determination of a variable
comprises determining the variable as a function of a number of times that the audience
member was in an audience of the receiver by a SID and a number of times that the
receiver was turned on by the SID.
89. The method of claim 77 wherein the method is executed only after
the passage of a predetermined amount of time from a previous prompting decision.
90. The method of claim 77 further comprising: initially prompting the audience member to enter the audience member
identification upon detection that the receiver has been turned on; and,
executing the method only after the passage of a predetermined amount of
time from the initial prompting.
PCT/US2002/018328 2001-06-18 2002-06-14 Method of prompting audience members in a audience identification system WO2002103942A1 (en)

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CA2450226A CA2450226C (en) 2001-06-18 2002-06-14 Method of prompting audience members in an audience identification system
JP2003506130A JP2004536501A (en) 2001-06-18 2002-06-14 A method for alerting the members of a viewer in a viewer identification system
NZ530015A NZ530015A (en) 2001-06-18 2002-06-14 Method of prompting audience members in an audience identification system
MXPA03011490A MXPA03011490A (en) 2001-06-18 2002-06-14 Method of prompting audience members in a audience identification system.
BR0210521-7A BR0210521A (en) 2001-06-18 2002-06-14 Method for guiding audience members in an audience identification system
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EP (1) EP1400044B1 (en)
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BR (1) BR0210521A (en)
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CA2450226A1 (en) 2002-12-27
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US20140229961A1 (en) 2014-08-14
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US8739194B2 (en) 2014-05-27
CA2450226C (en) 2013-04-23
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ZA200309740B (en) 2004-10-04
US20020198762A1 (en) 2002-12-26

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