SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR MONITORING DEVICE NON-USAGE
20220365584 · 2022-11-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02J7/00034
ELECTRICITY
H02J7/0048
ELECTRICITY
G06F3/04847
PHYSICS
G06F1/28
PHYSICS
H02J7/0068
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Systems and methods for monitoring hands-free metrics of personal electronic devices are disclosed. Connection of a personal electronic device to a charging circuit is detected and identified to a particular personal electronic device. Connections of each personal electronic device are aggregated and rendered to a display to provide feedback and gamification of periods of non-use of the personal electronic devices. Gamification is employed to promote non-use of the personal electronic devices.
Claims
1. A non-use monitoring system for a personal electronic device comprising: an electrical charging circuit to couple to a personal electronic device; a detector to detect an electrical coupling of the personal electronic device to the electrical charging circuit and to generate a signal associating to the device at least one of a time of connection and a duration of connection of the device to the electrical charging circuit; and a connection tabulator to generate an aggregation of the at least one of the time of connection and the duration of connection for the device and to cause the aggregation to be rendered to a display.
2. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the connection tabulator aggregates to the aggregation at least one of a subsequent time of connection and a subsequent duration of connection for the device.
3. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the detector is capable of detecting an electrical coupling of a plurality of personal electronic devices.
4. The non-use monitoring system of claim 3, wherein the detector uniquely identifies each device of the plurality of personal electronic devices.
5. The non-use monitoring system of claim 4, wherein the detector generates a signal uniquely associated to each device of the plurality of personal electronic devices.
6. The non-use monitoring system of claim 5, wherein the signal associates to the associated device at least one of a connection time and a connection duration of the associated device to the charging circuit.
7. The non-use monitoring system of claim 6, wherein the connection tabulator generates an aggregation for each device of the plurality of devices, the aggregation comprising the at least one of the connection time and the connection duration of the device to the charging circuit.
8. The non-use monitoring system of claim 7, wherein the connection tabulator aggregates to the aggregation of each device of the plurality of devices at least one of a subsequent time of connection and a subsequent duration of connection for the particular device.
9. The non-use monitoring system of claim 8, wherein the connection tabulator causes the aggregation for each device of the plurality of devices to be rendered to the display.
10. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the aggregation is rendered to a display at the connection tabulator.
11. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the aggregation is rendered at a display of the personal electronic device.
12. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the aggregation is rendered at a display of at least one of a desktop computing device, a handheld computing device, and a digital picture frame.
13. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the connection tabulator associates the aggregation to a user-defined identifier.
14. The non-use monitoring system of claim 9, wherein the connection aggregator causes a relative comparison of the aggregation for each device of the plurality of devices to be rendered to the display.
15. The non-use monitoring system of claim 1, wherein the detector detects one of the device electrically coupled while in use and the device electrically coupled while not in use.
16. A method for monitoring non-use of a personal electronic device comprising: detection of a connection of the personal electronic device to a charging circuit; generating a signal indicating at least one of a connection time and a connection duration of the personal electronic device to the charging circuit; generating an aggregation of a plurality of connections of the personal electronic device to the charging circuit, each connection comprising a time and duration of connection of the personal electronic device to the charging circuit; and rendering to a display the aggregation of the plurality of connections of the personal electronic device to the charging circuit.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein a plurality of personal electronic devices are connected to the charging circuit.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the connections of each personal electronic device of the plurality of personal electronic devices are associated exclusively to the relevant personal electronic device.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the rendering to a display comprises a comparative display of the aggregations of each of the personal electronic devices of the plurality of personal electronic devices.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein an award point is awarded for a connection of the personal electronic device based on a point award triggering event.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the award point is included in the aggregation.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006]
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] The inventions disclosed herein provide incentive for individual users of a plurality individual users of personal electronic devices to put the device down and be rewarded for time not spent on the personal electronic device. Said otherwise, the individual user is motivated to reduce time spent using the individual user's personal electronic device through a means of gamification among a plurality of individual users.
[0013] As used herein, “personal electronic device” (device) refers to a handheld personal computing device, such as, e.g., an Internet-capable telephone (smartphone), a tablet computing device (tablet), an electronic gaming device, etc.
[0014] As used herein, “coupled” refers to a physical or electrical connection between two or more components. A physical connection may comprise two or more components physically touching or being in proximity to each other, or being interconnected as by another component. An electrical connection is any connection whereby electrical power or an electrical signal is permitted or caused to flow from one component to one or more other components.
[0015] As used herein, the terms “tabulate” and “aggregate” refer to mathematically processing data to produce a datum or data. In other words, tabulate and aggregate each refers to quantifying a plurality of values to a value, such as, e.g., additively, multiplicatively, derivatively, etc. The terms tabulate and aggregate may be used interchangeably in the present disclosure without conferring disparate meaning.
[0016]
[0017]
[0018] By way of non-limiting example, in a home a parent may want to know that a particular device is at a particular location of the home. By placing the detector 17, the power interface 13, et seq., at an AC interface 12 at the desired location, the parent can be informed by the NuMS 101 of times and durations that the device is electrically coupled at the location.
[0019] Attributes of the connection of the electrical coupling may help identify the device based on information that is communicated through the various components (the device interface 15, the charging connection 14, the power interface 13, etc.). For example, a device might be identified by a current draw through the electrical coupling. To the extent that data is communicated through the connection of the electrical coupling, this data could also be available to identify the device 16 that has been electrically coupled.
[0020] It should be noted that the disclosure anticipates embodiments wherein the detector 17 may be placed at a different location within the NuMS 101. Disposition of the detector 17 between the AC interface 12 and the power interface 13 is but one example of a configuration of the NuMS 101 and is not a requirement or limitation. In one embodiment, the detector 17 may be disposed between the power interface 13 and the charging connection 14. In one embodiment, the detector 17 may be disposed between the charging connection 14 and the device interface 15. Furthermore, the disclosure anticipates embodiments wherein one or more of the components 11-15 may be absent, or wherein one or more of the components 11-15 may be combined into a composite component. The detector 17, in any such embodiment, may be disposed at an appropriate location between the AC outlet 11 and the device 16.
[0021]
[0022] When a device 16, 26 is coupled to a detector 26, 27, respectively, the connection information can be communicated to a component that tabulates information about that connection. In one embodiment, the component that tabulates information about the connection may be a device 16, 26. This communication can be achieved through a wired or wireless connection. The tabulation can tabulate various attributes about the connection. The tabulation may comprise a time of day the connection was made, how long the connection was made, the date the connection was made, and any other attributes that are available through either power or data that flows through the connection. The tabulation may comprise adding together durations of multiple connections of the particular device 16, 26 to produce a total duration of connection. Various calculations meaningful in the context of promoting non-use of the device 16, 26 are anticipated by the present disclosure.
[0023]
[0024]
[0025] There are multiple types of tabulation attributes that can be used to help achieve a desired result for the plurality of users (such as for a family). For example, each individual whose device 16, 26 is connected at a particular time of day may receive additional “points” on the scoreboard. In a family setting, the family may have a goal to connect each device 16, 26 at 9 pm, and a device 16, 26 connected earlier than 9 pm may receive additional “tabulation points.” The family may have a combined goal that is cumulative across multiple connections, e.g., to have a cumulative connection time of 10,000 hours to go on a trip.
[0026] There can be gamification elements of tabulation. For example, the first person to connect their device 16, 26 after 3 pm receives additional points or a specific reward. Points could be subtracted from a person for disconnecting their device 16, 26 for an extended period of time, or during a designated non-use connection period (e.g., during designated overnight hours). In a head-to-head competition, points could be added to one person if another person disconnects there device 16, 26. Points could be added to a person if they maintain a particular streak for a period of time (e.g., the user keeps their device 16, 26 connected for a minimum number of hours for a minimum range of consecutive days). Notification can be sent to everyone when a member of the group connects and/or disconnects a device 16, 26. Users can issue challenges to each other. By way of example, a first user challenges a second user to connect a device 16, 26 plugged within the next five minutes, to receive an award of bonus points. The NuMS 101 by be configurable such that, randomly during a day, messages could be sent out to all the users of the NuMS 101 that whoever gets a device 16, 26 connected first in the next five minutes gets extra bonus points, or failure to connect a device 16, 26 in the declared time frame results in losing a number of points. A point algorithm could detect when a certain percentage of users' devices 16, 26 are connected, and give them all additional “team” bonus points. For example if 70% of the users have their devices 16, 26 connected, each user who is part of that 70% gets a number of bonus points. Furthermore, those whose devices 16, 26 are not connected could lose points for not being connected while a threshold of other users are connected. For those not connected, points could be subtracted over time until they connect their device 16, 26, and when they do connect their device 16, 26, all users in the group could receive a combined bonus. There could be combined bonuses when all users' devices 16, 26 are connected at the same time. For example, if all family member-users' devices 16, 26 are connected at 5 pm, they all get additional points, and/or if they all stay connected for a particular length of time, they all get an allotment of bonus points. Devices and/or people can be grouped into competitive teams. The connection behaviors of team members can then be measured and tabulated in competitive manners. For example, one school of students might compete with a different school of students to accomplish a desired combined score where the winning team achieves an agreed award, for example a discounted rate at a community retailer. These are various examples of rewarding and incentivizing behaviors based on tracking connections, connection times, and comparing that information with that of other users and their connection attributes.
[0027] Points may be tabulated or aggregated by the connection tabulator 30, by the device 16, 26 of an administrator for the NuMS 101, etc. Points may be displayable with or in place of other visual components of the display. Various goal achievements in the tabulator might unlock electronic rewards. For example, as soon as a user (e.g., a child) has obtained a specific connection goal a particular application on their device 16, 26 may become available.
[0028] The connection tabulator 30 can exist in a closed development environment, where a single provider of “tabulation” interfaces and incentives develops the software to aggregate and/or visualize the tabulation. The connection tabulator 30 can also exist in an open environment, where multiple providers of “tabulation” interfaces and incentives can provide their own tabulation environments. These providers may have a monetization model where their tabulators are available in a tabulator marketplace.
[0029] In one embodiment, the connection tabulator 30 may be an analog counting device. For example, the connection tabulator 30 may comprise a rotary number system that increments based on connections of the component. In one embodiment, the connection tabulator 30 may be an electronic device such as a tablet on which various tabulation software(s) can be installed and made available to the end-user.
[0030]
[0031] While various aspects and embodiments have been disclosed herein, other aspects and embodiments are contemplated. The various aspects and embodiment disclosed herein are for purposes of illustration and are not intended to be limiting. It will be apparent to those having skill in the art that many changes may be made to the details of the above-described embodiments without departing from the underlying principles of the disclosure. The scope of the present disclosure should, therefore, be determined only by the following claims.