Patent No. 5644363 Apparatus for superimposing visual subliminal instructional materials on a video signal
Patent No. 5644363
Apparatus for superimposing visual subliminal instructional materials on a video signal (Mead, Jul 1, 1997)
Abstract
A subliminal video instructional device comprises circuitry for receiving an underlying video signal and presenting this signal to horizontal and vertical synchronization detection circuits, circuitry for generating a subliminal video message synchronized to the underlying video signal, and circuitry for adding the subliminal video message to the underlying video signal to create a combination video signal.
Notes:
FIELD
OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a system for generating subliminal instructional messages
synchronized to an underlying television signal, and for superimposing these
visual, and optionally aural, subliminal messages upon the underlying audiovisual
television signal.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Subliminal instructional messages are aural, symbolic, or textual messages presented
with an often unrelated visual, aural, or audiovisual presentation (hereinafter
the underlying video). These messages are presented in such a manner as to not
be distracting to the viewer of the underlying video, which is frequently an
entertainment oriented presentation. Subliminal messages are intended to be
recognized by the viewer's subconscious mind, where they may eventually lead
to behavioral modification.
Subliminal messages may be incorporated into a video signal for viewing on a
television receiver. This may be done by substituting a frame or field of the
video signal with the message, while the majority of fields or frames are those
of the underlying video. Subliminal messages may also be presented by weakly
modulating a visual characteristic, such as brightness, of the underlying video.
When a subliminal message is presented by weakly modulating a visual characteristic
of the underlying video signal, it is important that superimposed subliminal
messages be synchronized to the underlying video signal. If the superimposed
message's frame and line rates differ greatly from those of the underlying video,
the superimposed message may be become so broken up as to be illegible. Should
the rates be closer, the message may wander, or roll, about the screen in such
a way as to be distracting to the viewer.
Similarly audio subliminal messages can be superimposed upon an audio signal
by mixing them with the underlying audio signal. It is, however, advantageous
to increase the amplitude of the subliminal audio signal during those periods
when the underlying audio signal is loud relative to the amplitude of the subliminal
audio signal during those periods when the underlying audio signal is soft.
STATE OF THE ART
Systems for generating video subliminal instructional messages and superimposing
them upon an underlying video signal have been described in the art. Most of
these are not well suited for mass production at low cost. For example, U.S.
Pat. No. 5,027,208 presents a system having a 256 by 256 "substitute frame memory"
synchronously superimposed upon a video signal by means of a video mixer. While
this 256.times.256 frame memory offers respectable capabilities for displaying
graphic messages as well as textual messages, it also represents 8192 bytes
of memory, a substantial chunk compared to the on chip memory of low cost single-chip
microprocessors. The device of U.S. Pat. No. 5,027,208 also fails to provide
means for on-screen programming of the device.
Similarly, U.S. Pat. No. 5,134,484 presents 18 drawing sheets detailing a method
for dynamically decompressing an encoded graphical message. This message is
synchronously generated and superimposed on a video signal. While the invention
of U.S. Pat. No. 5,134,484 greatly reduces the required memory size for each
frame, this comes at a cost of extensive logic not found on even those commercially
available microprocessors which support the generating of synchronized video.
Further, no provisions are made for on-screen programming or providing control
over the modulation intensity of the subliminal messages. While U.S. Pat. No.
5,134,484 describes "additively" combining the subliminal signal in a "combiner,"
the disclosure is inadequate to determine exactly how the combining function
is performed.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,221,962 describes a system that provides a manual video modulation-intensity
control so that a user may consciously observe and validate the subliminal message.
No on-screen programming of the subliminal message generator is described.
Many low cost control-oriented microprocessors now available include a pulse-width
modulator. A pulse-width modulator comprises a few stages of latch and counter,
thus inherently costs far less than the resistor-string and R-2R ladder digital
to analog converters that are well known in the art. While a pulse width modulated
signal may be used to communicate digital information, pulse width modulated
signals are often used to drive electromechanical devices. Pulse-driven motor
and lamp drivers can be of much higher efficiency than linear analog drivers,
while mechanical, visual, or thermal inertia serves to integrate the mechanical
impulses provided by the pulse stream.
A common prior-art approach to modulating a color video signal involves the
three steps of 1) demodulating the color video signal into the three color signals
Red, Green, and Blue; 2) adjusting each of the three color signals as desired;
and 3) regenerating a composite video signal from the three adjusted color signals.
This prior art technique is expensive in terms of the hardware required. Consider
the hardware requirements of step 1 alone, the demodulating of a color signal:
generally a phase-locked loop regenerates or picks off the color subcarrier;
a crossover filter separates the chroma information from the luminance information;
mixers combine the regenerated color subcarrier with the chroma information,
producing baseband color difference signals; and finally the difference signals
are combined with the luminance information to produce demodulated red, green,
and blue signals.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention comprises a low cost system for generating subliminal
visual messages synchronized to a video signal, and superimposing those messages
through a programmably variable modulation of brightness of another video signal.
The subliminal messages are faded into view gradually so as to avoid distracting
a viewer. The invention further comprises a combination video generation hardware
that may generate both subliminal visual messages and messages associated with
the on-screen programming of the system.
The stronger the modulation of a visual characteristic, or the greater the number
of substituted frames, the greater the likelihood that the subliminal message
will become distracting to the viewer, at which point the message ceases to
be subliminal. Similarly, the weaker the modulation of the visual characteristic
the less likely that the subliminal message will be perceived by the subconscious
and result in a behavioral modification. It has been discovered that by fading
a subliminal message onto the screen gradually, a greater degree of modulation
is accepted as non-distracting to the viewer. Such a greater degree of modulation
is expected to result in a greater likelihood that the viewer's subconscious
will comprehend the message, and undertake a favorable behavioral modification.
The present invention also comprises a low cost method of impressing the subliminal
message on the composite video signal.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The best mode presently contemplated for carrying out the invention is illustrated
in the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a system block diagram wherein the present invention is used to superimpose
a subliminal instructional message upon a video signal originating from a videotape
recorder and being displayed on a television to a viewer;
FIG. 2 a block diagram of the subliminal message generator and superimposer
of the present invention;
FIG. 3 a circuit diagram of the integrator, switch, scaler, and video adder
of the present invention;
FIG. 4 is, a simplified block diagram of a portion of the 87C055 device used
in the present preferred embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
In the presently preferred embodiment of the present invention, a videocassette
recorder 10 (FIG. 1), is used to provide a source video signal 11 and a source
audio signal 12. The videocassette recorder may derive this signal by playing
a tape, from an antenna 13 by means of an integral tuner (not shown), from a
videogame entertainment device (not shown), or from a cable television signal
(not shown). The source video signal 11 and the source audio signal 12 are connected
to the subliminal message generator and superimposer 14. The subliminal message
generator and superimposer 14 is normally powered by a separate 12-volt D.C
power supply (not shown).
An optional audio tape player 15 generates an optional second audio signal 16
which may also feed the subliminal message generator and superimposer 14. This
second audio signal will be added to the source audio signal 12 to form either
an audio output (not shown) or the audio component of an RF-modulated television
signal output 18.
A program selection key cartridge 17 is inserted into the subliminal message
generator. This key cartridge 17 contains information about the nature and sequence
of the subliminal messages to be displayed; one key cartridge may contain messages
such as "Quit Now--Feel Good" for smokers, another may contain messages such
as "Exercise More--Feel Good" for viewers with weight problems. The subliminal
message generator generates and superimposes subliminal messages upon the video
signal from the VCR 10 to form either a video output (32 on FIGS. 2 and 3) or
an the video component of an RF-modulated television signal output 18. The audio
and video outputs, or the RF-modulated television signal 18, connect to a television
receiver 19 (FIG. 1 ) or monitor (not shown) which presents both an underlying
source program and the subliminal messages to a viewer (not shown).
FIG. 2 shows more detail of the subliminal message generator of the present
invention. The first video input 11 connects to a synch separator 21 which extracts
horizontal and vertical synchronization information from the video signal. This
horizontal and vertical synchronization information is used to synchronize a
video message generator 22 to the horizontal and vertical scan of the incoming
video input signal 11.
The video message generator 22 data output 23 is connected to a control input
of a highspeed switch 24. This switch selects either a constant 25 signal or
the output of an integrator 26. When the constant 25 is selected the screen
intensity of the television 20 will have a first value and when the integrator
output is selected the screen intensity will have a second value dependent on
the voltage output of the integrator 26. The integrator 26 output is a function
of the width of a pulse-width modulated signal 29. A processor 27 drives a pulse-width
modulator (PWM) 28 which produces the pulse-width modulated signal 29.
The highspeed switch 24 output is scaled by a scaler 30 and added by an adder
31 to the incoming video signal 11. The output of this adder 31 may be taken
as a video output 32 for a monitor, VCR, or other device with a composite video
input; or may be fed to an RF modulator 33 to generate a channel 3 or 4 television
signal 18. The audio output 12 of the videocassette recorder may be attenuated
by an attenuator (not shown) and mixed by a mixer 34 with an optional second
audio input 16 to produce an audio output 35. This audio output 35 also serves
as an audio input to the RF modulator 33, where the audio information is impressed
upon the channel 3 or 4 television signal 18..
The source video signal may comply with the NTSC, SECAM, or PAL standards for
composite video. While the presently contemplated initial manufactured version
envisions a separately manufactured device for each of these standards, and
for each language in which subliminal messages are generated, it is expected
that later models of the subliminal message generator will recognize the video
standard of the underlying video and automatically configure itself to the appropriate
standard. Distinguishing between PAL and NTSC standards may be accomplished
through timing the vertical synchronization signal extracted by the synch separator
21; as NTSC video comprises 60 fields per second while PAL comprises 50.
Revisiting the present preferred embodiment of the present invention, the pulse
width modulator output 29 is available as an open-drain output of the microprocessor
chip 40 (FIG. 3), where a potentiometer 41 is used to pull a logic "1" signal
to a desired level. A fixed resistor may be added between this potentiometer
41 and the power supply to prevent destruction of the pulse-width modulator
output 29 should the device be turned on with the wiper of potentiometer 41
turned all the way up. This pulse width modulator output is then integrated
by a resistor 42 and a capacitor 43, the integral is buffered by an amplifier
44. The output of this amplifier 44 is an analog voltage that corresponds, after
delays, to a digital value programmed into the pulse-width modulator 28 by the
microprocessor (27 on FIG. 2)
The 87C055 video processor chip used in the presently preferred embodiment has
three attribute lines on which the generated video signal 23 appears (FIG. 3),
two of which are provided for non-subliminal video displays used during initialization
and on-screen user programming of the system. The third of the generated video
lines 23, the line on which subliminal video appears 45, is inverted and level
shifted by transistor 46, resistor 47, and pull-up resistor 48. The inverted
signal controls a switch comprising transistor 49 and resistor 50 which applies
the buffered integral to an end of the scaling resistor 51, which feeds the
summing node 52. It has been found that 10K is a suitable value for the scaling
resistor 51. It has also been found that the circuit will provide an inverted
but otherwise suitable superposition of the generated subliminal messages upon
the underlying video signal if PNP transistor 49 is substituted with a NPN transistor,
the collector-base junction of which acts as a diode to shift down (instead
of the normal up) the node between resistors 50 and 51.
The video input signal 11 is buffered by an emitter-follower amplifier 53 and
applied through summing resistor 54 to the summing node 52. It has been found
that 511 ohms is a suitable value for the summing resistor 54. It is expected
that other values may be used for the summing resistors 54 and sealing resistor
51, provided that an approximate resistance ratio of from 1 to 10 through 1
to 50 is maintained. The summed video on the summing node 52 is then buffered
by an amplifier 55 to generate the video output signal 32. The operation of
summing the incoming video with the switched integrator voltage effectively
level shifts the underlying video signal by the subliminal message.
The non-subliminal generated video signals provided for on-screen programming
enter the video switch through resistor 62 for light and resistor 56 for dark.
Transistors 57 and 60, with resistors 58, 59, and 61, switch a current into
summing node 52 when a dark background is desired, and transistors 63 and 66,
together with resistors 62, 64, and 65 clamp the summing node 52 to a white
level when a white letter or symbol is desired for on-screen programming or
initialization displays. It is not necessary that the clamp circuits comprised
of transistors 57, 60, 63, 66 and resistors 58, 59, 61, 62, 64, and 65 actually
clamp the summing node voltage to a specific value, it is sufficient that they
provide sufficient current to overwhelm the input video signal. The hardware
of the present invention may be operated to provide dark letters and symbols
on a white background, dark letters on an underlying video background, or white
letters and symbols on an underlying video background.
The presently preferred embodiment utilizes two power supply voltages. The primary
supply, known as VCC2 68, is approximately 10 volts and regulated down from
a 12-volt standard wall-cube power supply. The second supply, VCC1 69, is approximately
5 volts as required for the microprocessor.
It has been found that a microprocessor with video message generator of the
Phillips 83C053, 83C054, 83C055 and 87C055 family is suitable for use in the
present invention. The 87C055 is preferred for prototype and low volume production,
while the mask programed 83C055 is preferred for higher volume production. In
the present preferred embodiment, a device of this family comprises the processor
27, the pulse-width modulator 28, and the video message generator 22 (FIG. 2).
The ROM or EPROM memory of the processor contains suitable software which causes
the processor 27 to perform the following functions involved in displaying a
subliminal message:
a. Upon power up, the processor 27 must properly initialize the video message
generator 22 for the video standard in use (NTSC or PAL are both supported by
the 83C054) by the underlying video signal.
b. The system may optionally go through a welcome screen to the user to set
maximum modulation levels for the subliminal messages.
c. For each message to be generated, the processor 27 sets the pulse width modulator
28 pulsewidth to zero for minimum modulation intensity.
d. The processor reads the key cartridge 17 (FIG. 2) for information regarding
the message to be displayed, and formats this message in the memory of the video
message generator 22. While some components of the messages are stored in the
cartridge, many components such as words are stored in the ROM or EPROM memory
of the processor; the cartridge need then only contain a pointer to each of
these message components.
e. The pulsewidth of the pulsewidth modulator 28 is slowly increased until the
desired maximum subliminal modulation level is reached. The slow increase in
pulsewidth causes the message to fade into view on the television screen without
distracting the viewer.
f. The message is allowed to remain on the screen for a given amount of time.
g. The pulsewidth of the pulsewidth modulator 28 is slowly decreased to zero
to fade out the subliminal message.
h. Steps c through g repeat for each message to be displayed.
The video generation hardware of the 87C054/87C055 family comprises a 128 character
display RAM 80 that contains a message to be displayed and four attribute bits
for each character. These attribute bits determine a foreground character attribute
code. These attribute codes are referred to as color codes in the 87C054/87C055
documentation. These attribute codes appear during each pixel time as a three
bit binary code on the VID0, VID1, and VID2 outputs 23 (FIG. 3), of the device.
The video generation hardware further comprises a character generator EPROM
or ROM 81 which contains a pixel pattern for up to sixty letters and symbols
that may be displayed.
In operation, a display character and foreground attribute is fetched from the
display RAM 81 into a character latch 82. This character, together with a current
line count within the present character row (from row counter 83), addresses
a word in the character generator EPROM or ROM 81. The character generator word
is placed in a parallel-load, serial output, shift register 84 and shifted each
pixel time to produce a pixel signal. The pixel signal from the shift register
is used to create the 3-bit attribute code output on VID0, VID1, and VID2 23
for each pixel of the generated image through selecting in a multiplexor 85
either the foreground attribute in the character latch 82 (which may be delayed
86 to compensate for the character generator cycle time) or a background attribute
in a register 87. In the present preferred embodiment, a VID2-VID1-VID0 code
of 111 produces unmodified underlying video, a code of 110 produces underlying
video as modified for a pixel of a subliminal message, a code of 101 produces
a dark pixel for non-subliminal on-screen programming use, and a code of 011
a white pixel for non-subliminal on-screen programming.
Whereas this invention is here illustrated
and described with reference to embodiments thereof presently contemplated as
the best mode of carrying out such invention in actual practice, it is to be
understood that various changes may be made in adapting the invention to different
embodiments without departing from the broader inventive concepts disclosed
herein and comprehended by the claims that follow.
Comments