US Patent Office Issues Three Gunshot Detection Patents to Shooter Detection Systems

US Patent Office Issues Three Gunshot Detection Patents to Shooter Detection Systems

Gunshot detection with video analytics, gunshot detection in an indoor environment, and gunshot detection analysis during fire alarms are now exclusive patents held by SDS

Shooter Detection Systems (SDS), the world’s leading gunshot detection solutions provider, is proud to announce that three major patents for gunshot detection technology have been issued to SDS by the U.S. Patent Office (USPO). The patents include gunshot detection with video analytics, gunshot detection analysis during an ongoing fire alarm, and gunshot detection within an indoor environment. SDS now holds exclusive standing as the only solutions provider in the indoor security market to own patents for gunshot detection capabilities.

On March 10, the USPO issued Patent No. US 10,586,109 B1 titled Indoor Gunshot Detection With Video Analytics. This application incorporates the ability to accurately detect gunshots and to combine this ability with video analytics. During the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, FL, on February 14, 2018, user error resulted in rewound video surveillance footage and a 30-minute delay before officers entered the building. The shooter killed 17 people in the incident, including 14 students and three staff members. The capability to automate video analytics from gunshot detections is an advancement that will alleviate life threatening delays, help identify a shooter with facial recognition, and track a shooter’s movements throughout a building.

On April 21, the company was issued Patent No. US 10,627,292 B1 titled Indoor Gunshot Detection Analysis During Ongoing Fire Alarm. This application includes the ability and an approach to accurately detect a gunshot in the presence of loud acoustic backgrounds and strong infrared signals associated with audio and visual alarms. In the Parkland shooting, the smoke from the shooter’s AR-15 rifle set off the school’s fire alarms. While the Parkland school did not have a gunshot detection system installed at the time, this event underscores the importance of a gunshot detection systems’ ability to isolate and detect gunshots without producing false alerts during a visually and acoustically challenging event. The Guardian Indoor Active Shooter Detection System has been proven in independent customer tests to accurately detect shots and filter out false alerts in challenging environments such as airports, manufacturing plants, and sports stadiums and in the presence of fire alarms.

On May 19, Patent No. US 10,657,800 B1 titled Gunshot Detection Within An Indoor Environment was issued. This application includes the ability to deploy indoor gunshot detection devices without a requirement for calibration, environmental training or other processes that can be burdensome and prone to errors, such as false alerts or failing to detect shots. Gunshot detection systems that require calibration in different environments add layers of complexities and lower overall market confidence in system accuracy. This patented, calibration-free capability is built into both the Guardian PoE and wireless sensors and continues to be a critical feature exclusive to the Guardian System.

“Commercializing military technology for the indoor market has been an exciting challenge,” said Ronald Fowler, CTO at SDS, who authored the patents with Richard Onofrio, the company’s Vice President of Hardware Engineering. “It is extremely satisfying to see our inventions patented and to further validate our position as the technology leader in the gunshot detection market.”

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