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[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of copending application Ser. No. 08/226,073 filed Apr. 11, 1994 which is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/025,397 filed Feb. 25, 1993, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,508,731, which is a continuation in part of copending application Ser. No. 07/763,672 filed Sep. 19, 1991, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,283,734, which is a continuation in part of application Ser. No. 07/603,882 filed Oct. 25, 1990, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,057,915, which is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 07/424,089 filed Oct. 19, 1989, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,034,807, which is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 192,355, filed May 10, 1988, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,926,255, which is continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 837,827 filed Mar. 10, 1986, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,745,468. Related material is found in U.S. Pat. No. 4,876,592 which is also a continuation-in-part of said application Ser. No. 837,827.
[0002] This invention relates to transmission by electronic media including radio and television broadcasting programs, as well as recordings of such programs, to listeners and viewers of the programs and, more particularly, to the provision of signals designating questions or tasks including a wagering situation, to the provision of response criteria for evaluating responses of the listeners and viewers of the broadcast or prerecorded programs, and to the dispensing of awards to individual listeners and viewers having provided answers meeting the response criteria and/or placed a wager.
[0003] The invention also particularly relates to the transmission of signals conveying scenarios of events about to take place or taking place and to outcome criteria for evaluating predictions of listeners and viewers of the broadcasts of such events and to the dispensing of awards to individual listeners and viewers having provided predictions meeting the outcome criteria. An example of a situation involving a prediction is a wagering situation in which a player designates a wager applied to a possible outcome of a given scenario.
[0004] A common form of program transmitted by the broadcast media is the quiz program. Typically, in such a program, a panel of people provide answers to questions arising from the subject matter of the quiz. Often, the answers are indicated by use of a keyboard with electronic circuitry.
[0005] The answers may be provided in response to questions which are asked directly, or in response to a situation such as a chess game, or task presented by the program such as in the solving of a puzzle. Other situations such as in sports, call for predictions of outcomes of events.
[0006] A characteristic of such quiz programs is the fact that the responses to the questions are limited to participants in the studio audience. The much larger external audience, namely the listeners of radio and viewers of television, are generally excluded from participation except for those few people who, on occasion, may have the opportunity to call in a response via telephone to a situation arising in the program. Letter writing has also been employed as a means of response to questions and other matters raised by the program.
[0007] Thus, it is apparent that a problem exists in that a large percentage of the external audience is essentially excluded from active participation in the broadcast programs. In view of the fact that the studio audiences can provide their responses electronically, it is clear that personal involvement, such as conversation among participants, is not necessarily required. It is, therefore, apparent that such programs should be open to participation by the larger external audience in addition to the studio audience; yet, no system providing for such participation has been available.
[0008] It is noted that this problem is not limited to quiz programs only, but that other forms of programs in the areas of education and research might also be conducted in a fashion allowing active public participation if a suitable system were available to make such public participation possible. A desirable feature of such a system would be the capability for evaluating and recording the responses, a feature that would be very useful in the case of educational programs because such a feature would permit a teacher to grade or otherwise evaluate papers and examinations dispensed to students by the broadcast media. Such a system would also be useful in commercial ventures wherein a prize is to be given to a participant providing an acceptable answer. In such a case, the participant would bring the recorded answer, which might be in the form of a coded credit card, to a store or other establishment for receipt of the prize. This would be a great convenience in the implementation of a sales and advertising program. Responses by the listening or viewing audience can also be used in conducting a survey of public opinion. However, in spite of the advantages which would be provided by such a system, for including the listening and viewing audience, no practical system has yet been available.
[0009] It would be advantageous also if the equipment of the system could be employed in the conduct of wagering, whether a simple lottery or a more complex situation involving wagering based on responses to a quiz game, educational game or a situation relating to the advertising of a product. It would be advantageous furthermore if such wagering could be conducted electronically so as to inhibit forgery and to reduce the number of inconvenient trips which a better must make to a lottery agent. Such a system and method of wagering is not available at the present time.
[0010] The foregoing problem is overcome, and other advantages are provided by a system for the evaluation of responses to a broadcast or a prerecorded program wherein a response may include the entry of a wager on a possible outcome of a situation presented in the program. In accordance with the invention, the system provides for the transmission of signals designating conditions of the wagering and, in the case of scenarios, games or other events upon which a person may wish to bet, the system provides questions and response criteria along with a transmission of the broadcast program. In the event of questions or similar tasks, signals may be recorded prior to transmission, and may be transmitted at a fixed predetermined time, or upon request of a person who will respond to the program and/or questions. The invention includes both method and system aspects which create added interest and excitement among listeners and viewers, and thus tend to increase the audience of stations carrying programs of the type to be described hereinafter.
[0011] In accordance with the theory of the invention, two groups of signals are broadcast, wherein each of the two signal groups may be divided in two portions designated as first and second signals. In the first signal group, the first of the two signals includes the program signal itself which may be broadcast from a radio station or television station to the listening or viewing audience. The second signal of the first group is a signal transmission setting forth a task, such as the answering of one or more questions which may be viewed on a television screen and/or listened to over radio or the audio portion of the television transmission. For simplicity in describing the invention, an audience viewing a televised program is presumed. It is understood that the description of the invention in terms of the viewing audience applies also to the listening audience of a radio broadcast.
[0012] The second of the two signal groups is in the nature of an instructional signal group identifying the amount of time available for an answer, the proper content and form of an acceptable answer, and a mode of scoring the answers. In one embodiment of the invention, the first signal of the second signal group sets forth the desired acceptable answer or answers, and the second signal provides the mode of scoring responses, such as the parameters, formulas and other response criteria to be employed in the scoring of the answers. Therefore, in this one embodiment of the invention, the two signal groups include at least four sets of signals which are transmitted, each of which can be varied independently of the other, and which may be transmitted concurrently or at different times.
[0013] Included at the site of each viewer in the external or remote audience is a television set, plus electronic response equipment having circuitry for reception of the instructional signal group transmitted from a central station, the response equipment also including a keyboard for designating answers or responses to the questions, timing circuitry, circuitry for comparing a response to one or more designated answers to determine acceptability of a response, scoring circuitry, and a recording device for recording answers to the question. The recording device includes preferably a dispenser for dispensing a record such as a printout, or a magnetizable card containing a person's responses to the questions and/or a person's score in answering the questions.
[0014] A particular advantage of the invention is the capacity for interaction between a person conducting a broadcast program and the external audience. This may be illustrated by way of example wherein a sportscaster is describing a sporting event such as a football game. The questions asked by the sportscaster may pertain to the winning team, to plays that have been accomplished, as well as to questions which may be called in by telephone from the listening/viewing audience. During the program, commercials may be aired, and various products and/or services may be described and offered to the viewing audience.
[0015] In the practice of the invention, it is noted that signals of the instructional signal group, Group Two, may be transmitted before, concurrently, or subsequent to the transmission of the program signals in accordance with the nature of the questions and responses required. For example, in the event that the program situation deals with a college professor giving an examination, the correct or acceptable answers to the various questions and the procedure for scoring answers to individual ones of the questions can be transmitted before the lecture in which the professor asks the questions. In the event that a limited period of time is available for response to each of the questions, then, at least a portion of the instructional signals, Group Two, must be sent concurrently with the program data, this portion being a timing signal which the professor would initiate when he asks the question. The timing signal would initiate operation of a timer in the electronic equipment at each of the receiving stations which are tuned to the broadcast program, the timer then clocking a requisite amount of time in accordance with an instructional signal which has been previously transmitted or is concurrently transmitted with the program data. In yet a further example, in the case of an interactive situation wherein the professor is responding to a comment made by a student in the classroom or, possibly in response to a telephoned inquiry, the professor may then ask a question for which the instructional signal designating the nature of the response would be transmitted after the question has been asked.
[0016] At a receiving station the electronic equipment includes a response unit having a keyboard by which a viewer of the broadcast program enters a response. The response should be a desirable or correct response, or at least an acceptable response in order to receive credit. The response is stored in a buffer store for comparison with a correct or acceptable response which is stored in a data memory. One or more acceptable responses are provided as a data input to the data memory by the instructional signal group. The comparison is provided by comparison circuitry which outputs a signal via timing circuitry to a score counter to provide a score at the conclusion of responses to a question. The timing circuit, under control of a program memory, is activated upon request from the host of the transmitted program. Instructional signals transmitted by the host are modulated onto the audio portion of the transmitted signals and, subsequently at a receiving station, are demodulated and decoded to provide the data signals for the data memory, synchronization signals for operation of the timing circuitry, and instructional signals for operation of the program memory. Alternatively, the instructional signals may be transmitted at television frequencies by known methods, such as the use of vertical blanking intervals or other unused parts of a television transmission. The resulting score from the score counter may be recorded in a readout device which, in a preferred embodiment of the invention, provides a printout or a card with an encrypted value of the score in a magnetic strip that is readily read by automatic card readers. According to one embodiment, a register may be included for the storage of responses which are printed or typed out in the form of a message. The message may be passed on to the readout device under instruction of the program memory.
[0017] At each of the remote receiving stations, circuitry responsive to the third signals is provided for implementing the response criteria. In particular, provisions are made to evaluate responses to the same question at different difficulty levels. For example, different amounts of credit can be given based on the speed at which a viewer responds to the question. Also, answers showing a more detailed, accurate or comprehensive understanding can be weighted to provide greater credit for responding to the question. If desired, a set of response criteria may include only one difficulty level.
[0018] The readout or dispensing device provides a printout having at least two sets of information. The information may be provided on a tape or card in printed lettering and/or in a bar code format to show the value of any award which might be given, and a verification of the fact that the award has been made. The printout may also verify the identity of the person answering the question. The verification may be provided either by a signal transmitted from a central station as part of the instructional group of signals to be stored at the remote location or, alternatively, by use of a validation code taking the form of alphanumeric data and/or other symbols, such as a machine readable code, which the dispenser is capable of printing. The value of the award is printed preferably in alphanumeric form so as to be readily understandable by the participant.
[0019] In the event that a two-way cable system is available, such system may be used to advantage in the practice of the invention by providing for transmission of the television program to a remote audience while also enabling members of the remote audience to communicate responses or other commentary back to the broadcasting station.
[0020] It is recognized that there may be situations wherein it is impractical to have communication of receiving stations with a studio at the central station at the time when the program is being generated. The invention would then be practiced by use of a further embodiment in which the program and instructional signals, including response criteria and scoring criteria, would be recorded for playback to the receiving stations at a later time. Such a situation might arise in the case of an educational program to be employed in a school, or to a program of general public interest which might be employed in a vehicle for public transportation, such as an aircraft. In the event that television is available at the receiving stations, the transmission and receiving equipment would be the same as that employed for the embodiment of the invention as disclosed above. However, in the event that only audio reception is possible, as by the use of earphones in an aircraft, then a verbal description of the task-setting situation would be provided, both the task setting and instructional verbal signals being recorded in an audio tape recording. Each of the receiving stations may be provided with a dispenser of hard-copy of results to responses to the task-setting message or, alternatively, a central dispenser may be used as in a classroom or aircraft, the central dispenser communicating via a digital communication system to response units at each of the receiving stations.
[0021] The transmission of a program, such as the playback of an audio-visual tape, may be initiated by a member of the remote audience though cable communication, including telephone. In such instances, a member of the home audience calls a dedicated number, such as a 900-number, and requests the playing of a tape. Such request may be made through a central operator or by dialing further digits of a dedicated number, associated with a specific tape or program selected by the caller.
[0022] In accordance with an important aspect of the invention, participants in the remote audience can designate an area of interest. This is particularly important with respect to an award received by individual ones of the participants, such that the award is related directly to a participants area of interest. Thus, in the case of a game show wherein advertiser's products are displayed in various areas of interest, a participant of the remote audience can select a product area of interest and, subsequently, receive an award in the form of a coupon allowing him to purchase a product in the area of interest. This greatly increases a participant's interest in the game show. This feature of the invention also greatly increases the chance that a participant will employ his coupon, as by visiting the store of an advertiser to redeem his coupon.
[0023] A further advantage of this feature of the invention is that it can be implemented using the electronic communication systems employed in various embodiments of the invention, including the use of a central station to broadcast program material with its set of instructional signals and directives on the imprinting of a coupon. Furthermore, this can be employed using the electronic systems of the embodiments of the invention wherein the program and the instructional signals are prerecorded. This includes the prerecorded format in which recording apparatus may be located, for example, in an aircraft, or may be employed with participants in the home interconnected with a central station by means of a telephone network.
[0024] In terms of utilization of the foregoing electronic equipment, questions, instructions, and coupon imprinting directives are transmitted from the central station to the remote stations in a plurality of categories of interest. These categories of interest are presented by the host in the communication transmitted from the central station. For example, in the case of a televised program, the categories of interest may be presented directly on the television screen. In cases wherein the program is transmitted by an audio channel only, then the categories of interest would be listed audibly by the host. The participants at the remote station by use of his response unit, presses a key on the keyboard indicating his selection of a desired category or area of interest. Thereupon, the response unit is responsive only to those questions, instructions, and coupon printing directives pertaining to the selected category of interest, and ignores the remaining questions, instructions, and coupon-printing directives as being irrelevant to the operation of the response unit. This is implemented readily by transmitting to the remote response unit, to be stored in a memory therein, the set of acceptable responses and the accompanying scoring criteria and advertising information for each area of interest. Then a respondent need only signal the response unit as to his desired area of interest, the signal serving to address the corresponding region of the memory. The response unit then operates with the data for the desired area of interest.
[0025] Normally, broadcast contests presently conducted are sponsored by manufacturers or retailers of products. Successful respondents may receive prize coupons entitling them to a discount on merchandise promoted by a sponsor. However, winners often receive coupons carrying a discount on merchandise they do not intend to purchase at the time they receive such a coupon. Discount coupons tied in this manner to an unwanted product will not be redeemed and are useless to both the public and the sponsor. It is a weakness of the coupon system presently in use that the overall coupon redemption rate is less than 4%.
[0026] The disclosed system and methodology provide for a dispensing of coupons to members of a broadcast audience for redemption, and enable members of the audience who have acceptably responded to a task presented in a broadcast to win a prize coupon carrying a discount deductible from the price of a product selected by such a member for purchase. Local sponsors thereby may promote the sale of products.
[0027] The foregoing coupons may be issued in conjunction with a broadcast television and/or radio program requiring an audience response wherein a part or all of the program is conducted in the form of a lottery, or other wagering situation, in which case the coupon identifies the winning entity which may be a lottery number, or the identity of horse in a horse race, or the identity of a player in a sports event. This is accomplished in accordance with a further aspect of the invention in which the aforementioned equipment can be employed for conducting a lottery game in a fashion which is resistant to forgery.
[0028] In accordance with the invention, there is provided a central data storage facility in which all player responses and, when desired, the winning response(s) are stored. Player entries can be authenticated electronically prior to storage at the central facility, and are transmitted either electronically (as by two-way cable, or by modem over a telephone line) from remote sites of players to the central facility. Authentication is accomplished by comparing numbers or names assigned to players, including serial numbers of player entry devices, with reference data previously stored in the central facility. Further authentication is provided by storing at the central facility data, such as the player's response and the winning number(s), which appears also on the coupon presented for redemption. At a redemption center, an electronic communication link with the central facility permits instant comparison of the two sets of data to verify the authenticity of the coupon and prevent fraud. The central facility may be connected to the remote stations and to a credit agency by means of a telephone network which permits verification of a player's line of credit, and a charging of lottery fees against a preestablished credit limit.
[0029] In accordance with a further aspect of the invention, numerous central stations, such as television and/or radio stations, may be linked together with a common base station and numerous telephone hubs by a communications system to form a network of broadcast stations serving a much enlarged audience wherein members of the audience are located at their respective remote receiving stations. The network is ideally suited for presentation of network programs of general interest, such as a sweepstakes and other prize events, to the enlarged audience by interspersing relatively short programs in time slots between segments of regularly scheduled disparate broadcast programs from the central stations. The base station provides program material for retransmissions via the central stations of the network. The network program, for any one time slot, may be in any one of a number of forms, particularly a contest having a duration in a range of time extending from less than one minute up to possibly several minutes for presentation on television or radio. The network broadcast may take the form of a well-known network communication commonly employed today for news programs communicated across the country from the base station simultaneously to local broadcasting stations for retransmission to home radios and televisions.
[0030] The individual programs are transmitted one after the other from the base station in a sequence extending for the duration of a program, or throughout the day. Each of the network programs occupy a predetermined time slot within a program sequence wherein the times of occurrence of the various programs as well as, possibly, the contents of programs, have been made known previously to the manager of the central station. Each central station is free to select specific ones of the network programs for rebroadcast in accordance with the program scheduling of the individual central station. This provides freedom for the host of the central station to employ network program material which may be live or previously prepared.
[0031] A great advantage of the invention is that the use of the network program material interspersed among local programming material allows people across the country to participate simultaneously in a common contest, or a common learning experience, or in a common national survey, by way of example. The use of alternative network programs inserted in opportune time slots allows the central stations to insert the network programs within the regular broadcasting schedules of the respective central station in a manner similar to that of the usual interruption of a broadcast program for a message from an advertiser or sponsor. Thereby, the invention allows for the simultaneous participation of people from across the country to be accomplished without need for any significant rescheduling of local programming.
[0032] Many people in the broadcast audience can participate by responding to tasks or questions set forth in the network program by use of electronic or telephone hubs which facilitate entry of the large number of responses, as well as to evaluate and authenticate the responses.
[0033] Furthermore, valid responses meeting response criteria may also be communicated by telephone link from each electronic hub to a central station for conduction of a sweepstakes. Means for conducting a sweepstakes or other prize event can also be located at and connected to an evaluation hub. Respondents, having provided an acceptable response, can immediately and automatically be entered in a further prize event, which can be a sweepstakes in which winners are randomly determined. Responses can be evaluated at one or more central sites by use of evaluation equipment which may be located in the electronic hubs or, alternatively, evaluation can be accomplished at the individual receiving stations by a response unit. The use of the central evaluation is particularly advantageous because a common evaluation facility allows the sweepstakes or other form of network program to be conducted without need for specialized equipment, other than a radio or television and a telephone, at a participant's receiving station.
[0034] In accordance with a feature in the practice of the invention, it is noted that equipment provided for enabling a respondent to respond to a task, and for evaluating a response, may be provided at the remote location of a respondent or, alternatively, may be provided partly at the remote location and partly at a central station. In the case wherein a fully equipped response unit is provided at the remote location, the equipment of the response unit includes a keyboard, a comparator, scoring circuitry, a memory, as well as other circuitry which may include a computer, and circuitry for applying point credits and displaying information, the equipment including also a printer as well as a modem for communicating via a telephone line. However, it is acknowledged that such equipment may represent an excessive expense to participants at remote locations, in which case the complexity and expense of the equipment at the remote locations can be reduced by placing some of the equipment, such as circuitry involved in comparing and scoring participants' answers at a central facility remote from the respondents' locations. Thus, response criteria and scoring criteria which are transmitted via a communications link to the remote receiving locations, in the case of a fully equipped response unit, would be diverted, in the case of a partially equipped remote station, to the central evaluation facility to enable circuitry within the facility to identify acceptable answers, to score the answers, and to credit or weight the answers with additional points appropriate to a difficulty level. In that case, instructional signals directing a printer at a respondent's location are generated at the evaluation hub and transmitted to the respondent's location. According to a preferred embodiment, these instructional signals are transmitted via cable to an addressable converter at respondent's location, which converter is coupled to a printer.
[0035] There are other reasons for which equipment, employed in responding to a task, may be located partially at the central evaluation facility. For example, it may be desired to score responses in the order in which responses are received, or it may be desired to alter programming of comparison and scoring circuitry in accordance with the amount of traffic in responses coming in to the evaluation facility. Also, it may be desirable to insure that there can be no tampering with equipment used in evaluating responses, in which case the equipment, for security reasons, is best located at the central facility. Also, it is noted that it may be desirable to rank the scores of the participants, as by time of response, or by magnitude of score, or by geographical region of the respondent, or upon some other basis, in which case ranking can be accomplished best by use of comparison and scoring circuitry at the central evaluation facility. Also, it is noted that a printing facility, for printing coupons, tokens, or other indicia of a proper response may be located at the central evaluation facility. An example is the playing of a game in a public location, such as in an airplane, in which passengers may compete or participate at their seats. Prize coupons are printed at a central location in the airplane and distributed to winning passengers as they exit the airplane. Thus, in the general sense of the invention, the various circuits and equipment can be located as required at either the remote locations or the central evaluation facility. Communication between a central studio, the remote response equipment and the central evaluation facility may be accomplished by dedicated communication lines, by a telephone system, via wireless or cable television and radio transmission, via satellite communication, or a plurality of different forms of communication systems as may be convenient.
[0036] Members of the broadcast audience can select or predict winning contestants among members of the studio audience who have agreed to serve as contestants on a game, quiz or other show requiring the generation of responses to tasks and/or questions. Rewards are given to such members of the broadcast audience who have correctly predicted one or more winning contestants. Such a reward may be combined with a prize given to a respondent of the broadcast audience for correctly responding to a task.
[0037] The aforementioned aspects and other features of the invention are described in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawing wherein:
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[0080] In the following description, FIGS.
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[0082] Two signals are broadcast by the central station
[0083] Two modes of transmission are provided for the two signals. In the case of the receiving station
[0084] In the practice of the invention, the instructional signal may be transmitted to a remote receiving station in any convenient manner such as via a cable transmission or by a specially broadcast transmission (not shown) or by combining the instructional signal with the audio signal in a radio broadcast or television broadcast. The combination of the instructional signal with the audio spectrum is demonstrated in the graph of
[0085] For example, the bandwidth of the instructional signal may be approximately 1% of the audio bandwidth, this being sufficient to enable a relatively slow transmission of instructional data to the response units
[0086] The receiver
[0087] In both of the receiving stations
[0088] The system described lends itself well to multi-part questions and/or to multiple choice answers, for any of which special forms can be provided, to be filled in or otherwise marked. The response recording and/or data entering means can have provisions for the insertion of special forms or blanks, which can be made available or mailed to participants. For example, a school may mail to students forms specially prepared for a particular examination or assignment. The response unit
[0089] Examination papers, whether taking the shape of forms to be filled in, or the result of a free hand composition or narrative, may also be graded by the comparator means, which is capable of identifying key phrases and words that are expected to appear on the completed examination paper. In similar fashion, comparator means to be described hereinafter is designed so as to be able to recognize and accept any one or more of a plurality of predetermined key words, symbols or phrases.
[0090] Dispenser
[0091] The records created pursuant to the present invention may be used as tokens, coupons, certificates and general proof of participation in the broadcast transmission program. Coupons may be redeemed by mail or in retail establishments for cash, prizes or discounts.
[0092] The following terms are useful in describing the system of the invention.
[0093] The term “task-setting” is intended to include the meaning of interrogative, opinion-eliciting and statement-eliciting, as well as the soliciting of creative endeavors and all kinds of functions capable of being performed by an entry in a data entering device.
[0094] The term “comparing” relates to one or more possible established responses which may be established prior to or subsequent to a contestant's response (the previously known color of a golf ball, or during a game, a prediction of how close the ball will come to the hole), and a comparing of an actual response to an established response to determine if an actual response is acceptable. An acceptable response may be based on one or more words or phrase or alphanumeric symbol or selection of designated objects, by way of example.
[0095] The terms “evaluating” and “scoring” are intended to refer to and include the meanings of sorting, counting, screening, evaluating, analyzing and processing information, data and responses in accordance with predetermined criteria, ranging from simple comparing tasks to computerized processing and analyses.
[0096] The term “interactive system” refers to a system for communicating from a sender to a respondent and having the capacity for allowing the sender to respond to a communication, when desired, from the respondent whether by manual or electronic means.
[0097] The term “response” is intended to include answers, elicited opinions and statements, text and narrative provided by contestants, respondents, students and other participants in broadcasts calling for interaction, reaction and responses.
[0098] The term “response criteria” is intended to refer to descriptive words, key words, key phrases, parameters, equations, formulas, symbols and definiens describing or defining responses that have been determined by the producer of a program to be acceptable in the context of a task so as to qualify for a reward. The term “response criteria” is intended to include one or more acceptable answers. As an example, in response to a question having four multiple-choice answers, the answers 1 and 2 can be stipulated as acceptable, so that no comparison or evaluation per se is required. Similarly, the terms “compare” and “evaluate” are intended to include determinations of the acceptability of responses in which an acceptable response is specifically prescribed without requiring a comparing or evaluation step.
[0099] The terms “outcome criteria” and “success criteria” are intended to include alphanumeric symbols and data by which the outcome of an event can be described, measured or identified, such as key and descriptive words, coordinates, grid, pinpointed and other locations, pictorial, diagrammatic and graphic presentations, results, scores, counts, records, distances, rates and other measurements.
[0100] The term “processed response” is intended to refer to and include the results produced by screening, sorting, scoring, evaluating, massaging, statistically analyzing, or otherwise machine-processing responses, data and information provided by participants at the receiving stations.
[0101] The term “hard copy” is intended to refer to and include any kind of permanent record capable of being visually read, scanned or machine read. The term “matrix” may be used to refer to the source or origin from which something originates, takes form or develops, such as a cellulosic or plastic strip capable of being provided with printed markings or magnetic recordings so as to create a hard copy record. The term “simulcast” is intended to refer to the simultaneous, but separate transmission from different propagating sources of the video and audio portions of a program.
[0102] In the context of formulating response criteria, the terms “formulate”, “generate”, “format” and “reformat” are intended to refer to and include the selection and determination of all factors affecting the evaluation and scoring of responses.
[0103] In the case of a task requiring a prediction of the outcome of an event which has not yet occurred or been completed, such as the completion of a forward pass in a football game, or winning a hand at a card game such as bridge, the response criteria may be referred to as outcome criteria. The outcome criteria is to be transmitted to contestants at remote stations at a time after the prediction has been made.
[0104] In the context of transmitting response criteria, for example, on an audio frequency, the use of the term “encoding” is intended to include various forms of signal coding as well as a transmission of signals at an increased speed which would render the signals unintelligible to the human ear. The term “encoding”, as used by way of example for transmitting response criteria, is intended to include other modes of communication such as various forms of color signal coding and transmission of signals to television stations capable of being read by sensors of devices for receiving signals outside the audible frequency range. The transmission of encoded information, whether within the audio spectrum or within the visual spectrum, is to be accomplished preferably in a fashion which is essentially unnoticed by a contestant and cannot be perceived as conveying information. In this sense, the encoding is perceptually unintelligible.
[0105] The term “keypad” is understood to include other forms of data entry devices, the keyboard being presented by way of example.
[0106] The term “print-out” is intended to include printed, embossed, punched, stamped, and other types of hard copy, paper, cardboard and plastic in the form of coupons, certificates, tokens, cards, forms and matrices. The printing of the print-out includes the foregoing forms of marking including the creation of three-dimensional configurations.
[0107] The term “central” as used, for example, in “central station”, is intended to refer to a broadcast station or network serving a country, a time zone or a region, and also is intended to include discrete local broadcast stations operating independently and serving a town or other smaller geographic area, always provided that such “central” station serves a multiplicity of remote receiving stations. It need not be at the geographic center of the region served.
[0108] The terms “remote” or “external” as used for example in “external audience”, are intended to include all television viewers and radio listeners tuned into an electronic transmission station, irrespective of the distance from such central station; as such, a “remote” audience includes, for example, students or other respondents positioned in close proximity to the source of a program, as in the case of a closed circuit transmission.
[0109] The term “interval” is intended to mean time interval or period of time.
[0110] The terms “code”, “encoding”, and “encryption” are intended to include alphanumeric codes, color codes, bar codes and symbols, including those readable, recognizable or conveyable by humans and machines.
[0111] The terms “acceptable response” or “acceptable answer” are intended to include all answers to a question, which answers meet or exceed a minimum standard or degree of accuracy, comprehensiveness or responsiveness; such “acceptable answers” specifically including partially correct answers. Answers may be defined as “acceptable” irrespective of a level of difficulty or a scoring mode.
[0112] The term “commercial message” as used herein includes sponsored, paid-for and other messages intended for commercial purposes.
[0113] The term “user” of a recording medium as used herein includes viewers, listeners, and buyers of a recording medium such as video tapes, and the target audience intended to be reached by the commercial message.
[0114] The term “intelligible” is intended to mean intelligible to a human without machine intervention, for example, without decoding, demodulation, change of transmission or receiving speed, or other manipulations to make a signal intelligible to humans. The term “intelligible” includes material which can be seen or heard such as written material or speech. The term “unintelligible”, as applied to various signals which may be transmitted by equipment employed in the practice of the invention, is intended to include signals which can be made intelligible only be machine intervention.
[0115] The terms “multipart task” or “multipart question” are intended to include any situations, such as questions, tasks and puzzles, in which a contestant is required to provide chronologically spaced responses related to a common question, task, puzzle, or subject matter requiring an action by the contestant. Such a task may include so-called umbrella or omnibus questions comprising sub-groups, contingent questions (e.g. “if the answer is “true”, then proceed to . . . ) and sub-questions derived from a parent question.
[0116] The term “reward” is intended to include in its scope discounts, prizes, free merchandise, monetary awards and other rewards having monetary or symbolic value. A “sweepstakes award” may be a special award of extra value beyond the value of a typical award.
[0117] The term “host” is intended to include an on-stage and an off-stage announcer, master of ceremonies, program director, guest host and celebrities, announcers of commercials and any other individual associated with the program or appointed to carry out one or more of the activities enumerated herein. It also is intended to include the individuals engaged in the operation of formulating a message or program for broadcasting on behalf of an advertiser, manufacturer, store or sponsor.
[0118] The term “difficulty level” is intended to include difficulty levels set by the host and inherent in the task or question, as reflected by possible answers, as well as difficulty levels inherent in a response or answer set by a respondent based on the speed, accuracy, comprehensiveness or responsiveness of the response and reflecting respondent's confidence in his or her knowledge of the subject matter. Similarly, a “difficulty level” may apply to the outcome of an event, as reflected by possible predictions.
[0119] In the formulation of a response to a question by a member of the external television audience, in the ensuing description reference will be made to a response in terms of recognition of key words as well as responses which require several words as in a phrase, sentence, formula and the like. It is to be understood that, in the generation of such responses, the term “word” includes also alphanumeric characters and other symbols such as pictorial representations which may be required as a proper response to a question.
[0120] With respect to various embodiments of the invention, the response unit
[0121] In
[0122] Also included within the studio
[0123] The instructional signals may be prerecorded and then propagated from a central transmission station to remote locations. In such a case, the host uses the keyboard (or other such device) to initiate the transmission of the instructional signal message.
[0124] In operation, the pressing of keys on the keyboard
[0125] The signal outputted by the band-pass filter
[0126] In the event that the simulcast of both the radio and the television transmissions is to be provided by the transmitter
[0127] The circuitry of
[0128] The television system
[0129] In the operation of the receiving station
[0130] In the operation of the receiving station
[0131] In accordance with a feature of the invention the demodulator
[0132] With reference to
[0133] The response unit
[0134] signals of the store
[0135] In operation, the memory
[0136] The method and system of the invention lend themselves particularly well to educational shows for children. Questions pertaining to educational toys, to books, to stories and to subjects being taught or addressed, are interspersed in the show. Children are rewarded with tokens or other forms of award, such as coupons redeemable at candy stores, ice cream parlors, and the like.
[0137] The score counter
[0138] The output count, score, or evaluation of the counter
[0139] The score counter/evaluator
[0140] If desired, the actual response entered at the keyboard
[0141] The printout mechanism or marking device may take different forms to meet the requirements of the broadcast, whether quiz programs, educational programs, tests surveys or other task setting assignments. These devices may be relatively small, utilizing a continuous tape as the substrate to which the markings are applied, or they may utilize full page printouts. The recording medium may be a special form or blank dispensed individually by the device as a cut section, or may take other configurations, including discontinuous shapes.
[0142] Although completely blank forms may be used in recording respondents' entries in the data entering device, in many instances the forms or blanks preferably are provided with lines, grids, schematics and the like for easier subsequent scoring of responses recorded on such forms or blanks.
[0143] To prevent tampering, forging and counterfeiting, the recording medium may comprise material, such as paper or cardboard stock, plastic and the like, of special composition or containing admixtures of identifiable substances facilitating recognition by electronic or other sensing and scanning devices. Verification may also be facilitated by using recording media that are colored, coated, embossed, textured, magnetized or otherwise given recognizable properties.
[0144] By replacing the recording media, such as rolls of paper tape, periodically, and by stipulating redemption of the record thus created within a specified time period, the unauthorized reproduction, tampering with and counterfeiting of the marked recording media can, for all practical purposes, be prevented.
[0145] The marking may be applied by any known methods, including printing with or without impact, using ink sprays, heat, magnetic pulses, laser beams and other light sources. The markings may also take the form of depressions and embossed configurations legible by appropriate devices.
[0146] In addition, to prevent tampering, the recording mechanism, such as a printer, can be provided with means for alternatively and selectively applying one of a plurality of different types of markings. As an example, the color, intensity, width, spacing, positioning, font and resolution of the markings may be built into the recording means and may be controlled by radio or other electronic command signals from a central station.
[0147] The shape and configuration of the markings to be utilized at any particular time and subject to change at any time, includes numbers, letters, dots, dashes, regular and irregular shapes, codes, symbols and other configurations, which may be discrete, connected or continuous. The markings may also comprise shapes and configurations having no discernible pattern and readable only by appropriate scanning, reading or decoding means.
[0148] The number of combinations and permutations of the above mentioned properties of the recording media and markings is so large as practically to preclude tampering, forging, altering, counterfeiting or reproduction of authentic records; the unauthorized manufacture of special composition paper alone, would be far too costly and particularly time consuming to be practical.
[0149] According to a feature of the invention, with respect to preventing the forging of prize winning coupons, a would-be forger is denied use of the printer to accomplish forgery.
[0150] As an illustration, a TV-viewer having a response unit (as described above) in his home, is provided with two materials or matrices to form hard copy outputted by the dispenser. For example, the matrices may be a paper tape comprised of 100 coupon sections, which tape is fed into the printer of the response unit, and a verification card having 100 spaces or boxes. The coupons and the card have the name or other identification of the TV-viewer imprinted thereon. Codes can be provided on both the tapes and cards. The paper tape and the verification card are tamper-resisting in various ways. Both can carry time limits for redemption. Tapes and cards provided to TV-viewers, say monthly, can for example have a 30-day limit for redemption. In view of the special composition of the tape and the card, their duplication by a forger would be impractical, because special paper or cardboard would have to be manufactured. The individual coupons and the spaces or boxes on the card carry identical consecutive numbers.
[0151] Each time a winning coupon is presented at a redemption center, the winner of such a prize is required to present the verification card. The numbers on the winning coupon and on the card are compared to verify their matching. When the coupon is redeemed, the corresponding space or box in the verification card are canceled or invalidated by any one of many known methods, such as marking, punching, tearing off, stamping and the like. When
[0152] By the method described, forging of coupons alone is rendered useless. Frequent changing of the properties of tapes and cards by the operator of the system and the multiplication of obstacles faced by a would-be forger are so great as to make forging practically impossible.
[0153] A similar system can be employed when using magnetized cards in lieu of paper coupons. The magnetized card of a winning contestant is provided with identifying indicia and codes, the verification card carrying matching markings and codes. The redemption procedures are similar.
[0154] If magnetized cards are used and validated by dispenser, the validation may be erased at the time a card is presented for redemption, so that it may be reused.
[0155] It is noted that the data to be stored in the memory
[0156] The control logic
[0157] The construction of the foregoing system of the invention permits its use in numerous situations involving participation wherein members in the external audience are to participate with members of the studio audience in situations requiring participation. An example of the utility of the system may be demonstrated by considering a television game/quiz show involving both people at home as well as in the studio. The invention makes it possible to broadcast quiz show permitting home viewers to become participants and contestants. The invention is applicable to a variety of present and future game shows.
[0158] As an illustration, a game show or quiz program may include the task of listing, in reverse chronological order, the names of all teams having won the baseball World Series, or the World Soccer Championship. A time limit is set which makes it impossible for contestants to enter all correct answers; this is common practice in aptitude tests.
[0159] There are five contestants on the studio stage. Each studio contestant is equipped with well known means to write, print, type or otherwise enter his or her response on a board, keyboard or other data entering device adapted so that the responses, in the process of being entered, may be projected on a screen or screens visible to the studio audience, but not to the contestants and not to the home viewers until the predetermined time limit has been reached, or until the time allowed has substantially been consumed. The responses of studio contestants can be displayed to the studio audience and to home viewers with some delay, thereby preventing any of the home contestants from benefiting from the answers of the stage contestants.
[0160] It therefore is an object of the system described to elicit responses from contestants at remote sites and to capture their responses in their data entering devices essentially before the responses given by stage or studio contestants become known to home contestants. This is accomplished by projecting the questions on a screen hidden from studio contestants but in view of the camera
[0161] In a simple version, the system can be employed to attract viewers and listeners not normally disposed to participate in game or quiz shows per se, but willing to answer a few unobtrusive questions, especially if pertaining to a subject of interest to the viewer. By responding to questions, a home viewer can, in effect, act as a contestant. The questions to be answered by home viewers and radio listeners can be interspersed in shows other than quiz shows and can be so simple as to require essentially only a confirmation by participants of being tuned in to a particular program.
[0162] Thus, for instance, home participants may be asked to identify the soap opera character who earlier appeared in the program. Or home viewers of a sports program may be asked to name a player who just scored. These implementations of the system and accompanying awards to a correct answer are intended to increase the television and radio audience. Viewers of a soap opera or persons listening to a radio sports broadcast, constitute a highly targeted audience and as a result of the lower per-household cost, advertisers will be able to award more valuable coupons and prizes to successful respondents. Participants who have given an acceptable answer can be rewarded with a coupon of defined value to be redeemed in cash, or to be applied to the price of a specified product or to the price of any product in a specified retail outlet. Other forms of rewards, whether of commercial or symbolic value, may be devised.
[0163] Advertising material, such as shopping hints and promotional material may be provided on hard copy records as coupons, prior to the delivery of the matrix, for example a paper tape, to participants at remote locations; or the advertising material may be provided and printed on the coupons at the time at which other data, such as prize information, is provided thereon.
[0164] The latter method has the advantage that a sponsor or advertiser can have up-to-date promotional information printed on coupons by directing the station which transmits instructional signals to remote locations to include in such signals the desired advertising material. A last-minute-telephone call by an advertiser to the sub-carrier station with directives to incorporate certain instructional signals in the sub-carrier transmission will result in a large number of shoppers being alerted to “special sales” through up-to-the-minute coupon promotions.
[0165] The quantitative results obtained by this method can also be used in the statistical analysis and the reactions of audiences tuned in to certain programs. It is noted that the equipment of the invention may well be installed in numerous selected or random households in which case, responses by household members can readily serve as a bases for statistically sampling peoples' responses to a product, service, political candidates, corporate images and other subjects of surveys. The increased audience provided by the invention is significant in survey and market research fields because, by way of example, an increase of sample size from 2000 to 2 million will reduce a sampling error from 3% to 0.1%.
[0166] In the field of qualitative market analysis and consumer research, the system and methods described can be employed very effectively, substituting home viewers and listeners for the so-called focus groups or other population samples used to determine buyer responses to products and services. The versatility and flexibility of the home keyboard or other data entering device are particularly well suited to the elicitation of unbiased responses to questions or statements by advertising agencies and market analysts. The market research and other surveys and polls made possible by the system and methods described, can be part of a regular quiz show or can be conducted separately. Respondents are rewarded for their cooperation by issuing certificates, coupons and the like to them. The permanent records produced by the dispensing means in remote locations can be mailed to the research organization. For this purpose the forms dispensed by the dispensers in participants' homes can take the form of self-addressed return envelopes. Special printed forms may be used in conducting research into respondents' reactions to tasks or questions. Coupon awards may be dispensed separately or may be a tear-off section of a survey form.
[0167] The relative simplicity and compactness of the electronic devices comprising the response unit, and the fact that the response unit is not connected by wire and requires no installation, makes it possible to design the response unit as a portable unit. A plurality of such units may be placed in systematically or randomly selected homes, used for the desired research purposes and thereupon moved to new locations. The units may be battery powered to provide mobility for use at private or public locations.
[0168] For the implementation of game/quiz shows, the following advantages of the invention are noted. The system of the invention does not require any wiring or rewiring of a home nor the use of telephone lines, and may be offered to viewers free of charge. In the context of the disclosed embodiment, a telephone is suggested merely as a convenient and rapid means for interaction between respondent and host, but is not required to practice the invention. For example, the external audience might be located in a separate room within walking distance from the studio in which case interaction can be accomplished personally by allowing a member of the external audience to walk over to the studio. The system permits home viewers to participate in quiz shows on the spur of the moment without advance notice and without any requirement for special forms or entry blanks. The system can be superposed upon a variety of game and quiz shows to permit viewer participation without interference with existing show formats, and has the advantage of expanding the television audience, thereby attracting sponsors of the shows. The machine readable card
[0169] When applying the methods and systems described to a multipart task, contestants normally are confronted with a situation, such as questions or puzzles, in which a plurality of entries on the response entering device are required, the total of the responses determining the correctness or acceptability of a contestant's response.
[0170] While such an event or operation of such a task is in progress, the responses, entered piecemeal, as well as the applicable response criteria, are stored at contestants' locations. In a game shoe situation, one unacceptable answer may eliminate or disqualify a contestant from winning a prize. The task may be presented all at once, or in parts presented successively and calling for a partial response to each partial task.
[0171] The comparison and scoring means can be programmed to perform their functions at each stage of the task, upon completion of the entire task, or following a group of partial tasks. The printer/dispenser normally is programmed to operate at the end of all responses by a contestant to a multi-part task.
[0172] The system provides simplicity in the administration of the game by identification of the successful respondents; this is readily accomplished at the dispenser
[0173] If, as an example, a respondent must select a number from the numbers 1 through 9, and if the completely accurate answer is 5, the comparator unit may be programmed so as to accept any number between 4 and 6, or 3 and 6, etc.
[0174] The response entering device
[0175] By way of alternative embodiments of the invention, it is noted that the comparator
[0176] The formatting and reformatting can provide for various ways of weighing the responses of home contestants, such as straight line additions, geometric and exponential progressions, or computations of scores based on formulas incorporating discrete groups of responses. Thus, score counter
[0177] According to the present invention, questions may be transmitted from the central station, to which more than one acceptable answer may be given, the answers varying in the degree of difficulty from the respondent's standpoint. As an example, a question may call for naming a minimum of two European cities, the names beginning with the letter M, this being difficulty level 1. Difficulty level 2 might call for four such cities and difficulty level 3 might call for six such cities, all answers to be entered within 30 seconds. The particular difficulty level may be specified by the person controlling the transmission, or it may be selected by the individual respondent prior to seeing or hearing the question. In order to enable a contestant to choose a difficulty level, the host may announce or hint at the general nature, or the context of the question about to be asked. The degree of difficulty will normally determine the value of the prize, etc. The device evaluating the responses may dispense records, e.g. coupons, certificates and the like of different value or in different denominations. For instance, it may issue a 10 cent coupon at level 1, and 25 cent coupon at level 2, and a 50 cent coupon at level 3. The coupons may be redeemed in retail establishments, the coupons being similar to those contained in newspapers. It should be understood, therefore, that in addition to the difficulty level set by the host, a higher difficulty level may be superimposed by an individual contestant, as will be disclosed subsequently with reference to FIGS.
[0178] By use of encryption, the card
[0179] It should be understood that individual questions may vary with respect to the nature of the task, the type and particulars of acceptable responses, the difficulty level, the period of time allowed for responding, the kind and range of prizes, the weighing of responses, the composition of the target audience and other considerations.
[0180] It should be further understood that normally the announcements to remote participants of levels of difficulty and of time intervals allowed for responding to a task are transmitted and received in a form directly intelligible to participants, such as in open language. If an acceptable response criteria is transmitted, prior to entry of a response by a participant, it is conveyed in coded or otherwise unintelligible form; if it is transmitted subsequent to such entry, it may be conveyed in open language.
[0181] As an example in the use of the invention in the educational field, the memories of the response units at the remote locations receive and retain instructional signals from a central transmitting station conveying the correct, preferred, or acceptable response or responses to the task posed by the task-setting message. Upon completion of a task by a respondent, or upon lapsing of the allotted time, the printout mechanism is activated by the instructional signals so as to communicate or so as to dispense in hard copy form the correct or preferred response to each respondent at remote locations. In this manner, a student who receives a printout containing his or her scored response, also receives the “textbook” solution or most desirable response to the task presented. For comparison purposes, the dispenser may provide printed hard copy containing a student's original response.
[0182] The foregoing features in the operation of the system of the invention are readily applied to the educational field to encourage both early educational experiences among children as well as for home-study courses for high school and university students. In the educational field, the situation portrayed in the studio and presented on the television screen may be in the nature of a task-setting situation rather than that of a pure question. The appropriate response be a brief statement, an equation, or may contain a number of cross-referenced key words or key phrases or symbols. The system of the invention may be implemented also by closed circuit television and cable television as well as by the broadcast situation of
[0183] Response evaluation means referred to herein may include, when appropriate, as for example in the educational field, scanning devices capable of recognizing symbols, diagrams. charts, formulas, equations and drawings responsive to the response criteria.
[0184] In the practice of the invention, the answers given by studio contestants may, for instance, be displayed to the studio audience and/or broadcast to TV-viewers following a predetermined delay of, say 5-20 seconds. During this 5-20 second period, the data or response entering devices of the stage contestants, or the studio display devices, may be made inoperative, so that no answers may be entered and/or displayed, even if the stage contestants are aware of the questions. Other ways of staggering the “response windows” by 5-20 seconds or more can be devised.
[0185] This time lag is intended to make the answers projected on studio screens following the time lag useless to home contestants from the point of view of total time allowed for response. By the time the correct answers are televised, all or a critical amount of the allotted time will have elapsed. This forces home contestants to enter their responses before knowing the responses of studio contestants.
[0186] By way of example only, a typical sequence of events as pertaining to a quiz show with studio and home contestants is as follows: TV home viewers and contestants see and hear the questions without delay. However, the questions are presented to stage contestants and the studio audience after a delay of 5 - 20 seconds. The respective contestants may begin answering questions upon their presentation, subject to time limits. Acceptable responses are presented to everyone, only after the stage contestants have completed their time for response.
[0187] To provide attention-attracting action on stage for the studio audience and TV-viewers who are not contestants, the announcer or master of ceremonies can set the stage for the questions, or a performer may walk across the stage to a podium and read the questions to the stage contestants and the audience, thereby consuming 5-20 seconds. The questions are displayed on a screen, visible to all TV-viewers, including home contestants. Other ways of giving home contestants a head start of 5-20 seconds, or more, can be devised. In another embodiment, the responses by stage contestants are entered, but not displayed for a predetermined period of time. Home contestants may be allotted more or less time than studio participants. If there is only one participant or contestant on stage, the quiz show still follows the concept outlined. The studio contestants and/or home contestants may be allowed a choice of different difficulty levels.
[0188] As an example, the use of key words and key phrases is illustrated in the context of a game show described hereinafter, which might be entitled “Definitions”. the host presents a situation, hints at, or announces a dictionary word and defines the task as one of providing the correct definition or definitions of such word. The dictionary definition, frequently a phrase, is of course an acceptable answer. Using the task word “many” as an example, an indispensable key work that would have to appear in any acceptable response would be the word “number”. However, two or more definitions may exist for a task word.
[0189] It will be obvious that this type of show lends itself well to evaluating partially correct and less-than-exhaustive responses. Partial credit may be given to definitions that are reasonably close to the dictionary definition. A more complex task in the context of said show might be the definition of the word “set”, for which a large number of definitions exist. Cumulative credits may be awarded to contestants listing a plurality of key definition words or phrases.
[0190] According to another show format, separate quiz programs for studio contestants and home contestants may be conducted concurrently by the same game show host. He or she may, for instance, conduct one quiz program for studio contestants in the manner described and while the studio contestants ponder their answers may present supplemental, or a separate set of, questions to home contestants, to which the latter respond in accordance with the method of the present invention. Such separate questions for home contestants may be posed by a second or off-stage announcer.
[0191] In the United States, Europe and other regions, television programs are frequently broadcast repetitively in different time zones. In the case of game shows, this enables television viewers who are tuned in to such program and who are in a time. zone which first receives one such game or quiz show to inform members of an audience in another time zone of the correct responses to tasks or questions, thus ensuring such members in other time zones of winning an award without having independently correctly responded to such tasks. This potential problem resulting from a sequential broadcasting of television game shows in the context of the present invention will now be addressed.
[0192] When the awards offered successful contestants are of a monetary value representing, say 10-15 percent of the price of the merchandise, and are designed only to attract buyers to a store, then a sponsor, such as a manufacturer, may choose to ignore the risk of, or may even welcome, having members of an audience in a first time zone provide members in a later time zone, who themselves did not think of the correct answer, with an appropriate response. Awarding such viewer a 10 percent discount is similar to making 10 percent discount coupons available through newspapers and magazines.
[0193] A more serious problem may arise when a sponsor or manufacturer offers awards of a larger magnitude. In such instances, it is desirable-to employ a method, and such methods are hereinafter described, which permit airing a quiz or educational program presenting tasks or questions calling for different responses in different time zones. This is achieved by a modified version of the methods described above, which modified methods may be practiced with the systems described in this specification and accompanying drawings.
[0194] For example, a host or professor may stand in front of a map of the world. He or she verbally poses the question “In which country is the river to which I am pointing located?” For purposes of this illustration, the audio portion of the question, posed by an on-stage or off-stage announcer, is referred to herein as a “module question”, and normally a quiz show or educational program comprises many such module questions. The object of formulating module questions is to be able easily and economically to substitute such module questions for each other in the same show, which normally is taped prior to airing. Such a module question, consisting of the audio portion of the question-can easily and economically be replaced by another audio portion, while the more costly video portion (the host pointing to a map) remains the same.
[0195] In such a modified method, a part of all of a question or task presented in a program in one time zone, are differentiated and are different from the corresponding question or task asked in a similar program aired in another time zone. This is achieved by formulating at least a part of a question or task in interchangeable module form.
[0196] Either an entire question may be substituted in a program, or a part of a question may be substituted. If only a part of a question is to be substituted, such part can for instance be a part or all of only the video portion of a question. Normally, such interchangeable module questions will be of approximately the same length, so as not to affect the overall length of a program.
[0197] If a program comprises an entertainment portion and a game or quiz show portion, the part of the show consisting of questions or tasks may be produced and taped separately and independently of the entertainment of other portions of the show. Many forms of implementation of this method may be devised. The example given below is illustrative of only one of the alternative methods which achieve the above mentioned object.
[0198] According to a preferred method, a plurality of sets of different tasks is formulated, using one set of tasks in one time zone and another set of tasks in another time zone. Although the tasks may differ in their entirety, a preferred method is described wherein the tasks differ only with respect to their audio portion.
[0199] In the taping of the show, the video portion is the same in all tapes, irrespective of the time zone in which such program is to be aired or transmitted by cable. The audio and video portions together form a question or task. The audio portions of module questions change from one such program to the next. Thus the host or professor is seen in all versions of the show to be pointing to the same map. He or she will, however, tape a plurality of oral module questions, only one of these module questions being used in any one time zone. With reference to the above example, in which a host points to a map of the world, another module question may be “What is the name of the river?” Yet another such module question by the host, or off-stage person, may be “Is the river to which I am pointing among the five longest rivers in the world?”
[0200] The above described example involves the same host or professor asking a set of questions, each of which questions must be taped in its entirety. This necessitates the involvement of the host in asking a set of successive oral questions, while the video portion remains the same. In another version of this preferred method, the module questions, that is the audio portions of each question, are asked by an off-camera announcer. This method has the advantage that in the taping of the show, the host spends only sufficient time in front of the camera to ask one question, the host providing such action in front of the camera as is required to make the oral module question asked by the off-camera announcer intelligible. Thus, the host may silently point to an object, such as a map, for a length of time permitting an off-camera announcer to pose one module question. Other module questions asked by the off-camera announcer and accompanying the same video portion showing the host, are dubbed or inserted into the appropriate part of the tape. In the taping of a quiz show intended to be aired in four time zones, an off-camera announcer therefore asks four sets of module questions, one set of these oral questions being inserted into the appropriate place in each of the four program tapes used in transmitting the show in the four time zones.
[0201] According to a preferred embodiment of the above-described methods for use in the presentation of quiz programs in different languages, a host announces the oral module questions in one language. Different oral module questions are dubbed in, both in the language originally used by the host and in any other languages for use in different countries. In such an event the words and sentences chosen in formulating questions, are such as to lend themselves to dubbing. Also, the host when announcing some questions, can face towards a picture or a map, away from the viewing audience, in order to facilitate dubbing.
[0202] Thus the dubbing technique is an economical method of achieving the above-mentioned objective of utilizing the same video portions with a variety of different audio questions in different time zones.
[0203] Yet another example of a simplified version of the above methods may entail a projection of a scene or the filming of an object without a host being present. The object could be a well-known personality, or a picture of such personality; or an action shot of such personality may be used. An off-camera announcer may ask a number of oral or module questions to meet the requirements of the number of shows to be shown in different time zones.
[0204] The examples set forth are simple ones and many different and more complex versions and implementations of the home quiz show are possible and will occur to game show producers.
[0205] In some instances, such as in market research, the system described can be employed to identify consumers meeting certain criteria. In that event, the memory and control elements of response unit
[0206] It is a particular advantage of the present system that the kind of data-entering device may vary between different remote locations. Furthermore, the kind of data entering, scoring or evaluating device installed at different locations may vary in accordance with the intended use. Thus, for instance, in selected remote locations, electronic devices of known design may be installed, which are capable of subjecting the raw data entered by respondents to computer analysis.
[0207] The invention may be practiced by providing two or more response units at each remote location together with one set of program presenting means. Providing more than one response unit, including means to modify a difficulty level and timing, and including comparison, storing, scoring and dispensing means in, for example, one household, enables two or more family members to become contestants by responding individually to a situation presented by a single television or radio receiver based on a program transmission from a central station. In a public place, a plurality of response units will generate increased and competitive participation by persons present.
[0208]
[0209] Also shown in
[0210] The dispenser
[0211] Alternatively, the block location data and the responses may be stored on the card
[0212] By way of further embodiments of the invention, it is noted that the dispenser
[0213] As was shown with respect to
[0214] The embodiments of the system of FIGS.
[0215] At the discretion of the television program conductor, or other person assigned for this purpose, and that of individual viewers, different difficulty levels may be applied to individual questions, it being understood that answers to more difficult questions or answers to the same questions at higher difficulty level may carry with them larger awards. However, even if only one set of response criteria is established for a task, it is understood that such response criteria carry a specified or implied difficulty level. Each successful respondent may be issued a printout or similar hard copy displaying the value of the award and containing a code which is verifiable over the telephone by a central station, or without the use of a telephone, by a cooperating store or merchandising center, for issuing an award.
[0216]
[0217] A television program is conducted in the studio
[0218] In the studio
[0219] With reference to both
[0220] As example of a further signal, a fifth signal providing a verification code for use in verifying a printout of awards at a remote station may be sent subsequently along the same channel employed for transmission of the scoring criteria. The passbands of the third and the fourth signals, namely the response criteria and the scoring mode signals respectively, are indicated in
[0221] The central station
[0222] Similarly, the processor
[0223] Each of the processors
[0224] In operation, the encoder
[0225] The television system
[0226] Also shown in
[0227] In operation, the receiver
[0228]
[0229] In
[0230] In the central station
[0231] In operation, the encoded response criteria and scoring mode signals of the keyboards
[0232] The broadcast transmission from the central station
[0233] The television system
[0234] In operation, the video signal outputted by the demodulator
[0235] The signal on line
[0236] The signal on line
[0237] With reference to
[0238] Also included within the response unit
[0239] The response unit
[0240] In operation, the program memory
[0241] In one type of question-response situation, the host
[0242] While various forms of responses may be desired for specific situations which may be depicted in the studio
[0243] The first comparator channel is employed for evaluating responses based on the presence of a key word. This is accomplished as follows. A member of the remote audience presses a key-word button on the keyboard
[0244] By way of alternative embodiments, it is noted that the multipliers
[0245] In the same fashion, the comparator
[0246] In the scoring logic unit
[0247] The keyboard
[0248] Normally, the difficulty level announced by the host will be “difficulty level one”, with which a certain award is associated. Correspondingly greater awards may be announced for correct answers at higher difficulty levels. The choice of selecting such higher difficulty level rests with the contestants and may, where a choice of subject matters is offered, be made after the host has announced the general subject matter or the nature of the next question.
[0249] After participating in a number of games or other projects, each of which has resulted in the awarding to the respondent of a prize or award of significant monetary value, it may be desirable to total the value of all of the awards for a grand total award. The accumulator
[0250]
[0251] The foregoing circuitry allows the response unit to operate, if desired, by presenting a predetermined credit, based on time to respond and on accuracy of response by way of example, to a contestant at the time when a question is asked. Deductions in score are made for excessive time, incomplete answers or inaccurate answers, by way of example. This is accomplished by the counters
[0252] With respect to the system and methodology of the invention, communication with the home audience by the normal television channels of electronic transmission includes signals broadcast on television frequencies via cable including fiber optics or satellite. A typical example in the propagation of such electronic signals would be that transmission to a communication satellite which, in turn, transmits the signals to ground receiving sites adapted to send the signals either from broadcast stations over the air or via cable to cable subscribers. These signals include the first two signals of Group One mentioned hereinabove, namely the program and the task signals, received by the television receivers at each of the remote locations at which a television viewer is located. Encouragement of as many viewers as possible to participate is accomplished by allowing the television viewers to become contestants who participate in a quiz program or other audience-participation program on the spur of the moment and in the middle of a program wherein the participants win prizes.
[0253] A number of versions of the invention in the operation of a sweepstakes system will now be described. According to one embodiment, instructional signals transmitted to all remote locations include signals which, if matching, or bearing a correlation to, symbols on said hard copy record, qualify a participant for a special or sweepstake prize. If, for example, a coupon having previously provided alphanumeric or other symbols is issued to a participant who has entered an acceptable response, such participant qualifies for a sweepstake prize if the said symbols on such coupon are the same or have a correlation, namely, a defined relationship to certain sweepstakes symbols. The symbols on the coupon may be in the form of preprinted sequential numbers, and the sweepstakes symbols may be transmitted from a central location as part of the instructional signals directing the printer to print the sweepstake symbols. In that event, a successful contestant discerns immediately whether he or she has qualified for a sweepstakes prize. Alternatively, the sweepstakes symbols are provided to a place where winning records are redeemed, such as banks or supermarkets, and a person presenting a coupon for redemption learns only at this place and point in time that he or she has won a special prize or sweepstake.
[0254] The term “correlation” refers to a predetermined relationship of alphanumeric or other symbols provided on hard copy records and identifying sweepstake awards, whether or not such relationship is expressed in mathematical terms. Thus, the indicia identifying a winning coupon and a sweepstake award may be deemed to be correlated if they are identical or if they meet a predetermined mathematical formula or other definition. The specific correlation entitling a coupon holder to a sweepstakes prize may be known or discernible only at a redemption center. In such an instance, a contestant having been issued a winning coupon will ascertain whether or not a sweepstake prize has been won only after presenting a winning coupon at a supermarket or other redemption center.
[0255] Even if the sweepstakes symbols are transmitted to the home of a contestant and are immediately printed on a winning coupon, the following method may be employed to compel such contestant to visit a redemption center, such as a supermarket in order to ascertain whether he or she has won a sweepstakes prize. This is achieved by selecting and providing sweepstakes symbols which are not identical to the symbols of a winning coupon, but bear a previously identified relationship. As an example, if a stipulated percentage of a plurality of alphanumeric elements on a winning coupon matches the elements of sweepstakes symbols, a sweepstakes prize may be awarded. Such prize can be larger, if a larger number of elements comprising the award symbols is matched by the sweepstakes symbols.
[0256] In another modification of the method, the winning coupon symbols and the sweepstakes symbols may have no discernible relationship. Any desired correlation between the sets of symbols may be devised, such as a zero relationship, wherein the two sets of symbols have no common elements, or a previously defined formula may be employed wherein for example the symbols are numbers and the sweepstake number is half the winning coupon number.
[0257] Sweepstakes symbols determined at a central location may be provided electronically or otherwise to redemption centers, together, when required, with a formula for identifying an acceptable correlation with symbols on a winning coupon, thus identifying such a coupon as one qualifying for sweepstakes prize.
[0258] According to the method of the invention, the number of prizes awarded and their values are set by the sponsor of the program, and normally are set so as to optimize the financial return to the sponsor or broadcaster. Normally, in a quiz program, a plurality of tasks will be presented. Each task is formulated in such form that the task setting message may be electronically transmitted from the central location as the second signals or second set of signals of the aforementioned Group One to be received by the viewers at the remote locations. It is noted that all of the signals comprising Group One may be transmitted at the same time, such as by being part of the same pictorial presentation. A simple illustration of such presentation would involve a celebrity appearing before a television camera, holding a sign reading “Who am I?”.
[0259] Typically, these tasks comprise questions to be answered by viewers who wish to become contestants. The tasks may differ with respect to fields of knowledge, memory skills and reaction speed, literacy, comprehension, expression and experience required, and other aspects. The time allowed viewers to respond to a task may vary. The task may take any form of questions including single-answer questions and multiple-part questions. The questions may also call for one or more multiple choice answers. There may be a requirement that, with respect to a specific task, a minimum number of responses must be provided by participants. The questions may also be open-ended in the sense that viewers can not completely answer a question within an allotted time, a practice common in aptitude tests. A task could, for instance, involve a listing of a large number of names or other data in response to a question to which the answers are more numerous than can be answered within the prescribed time. Normally, the host announces the period of time allowed for entering answers at the time a question is posed. At substantially the same time, the host or other person aiding in the program, may also announce or hint at the general subject area of the next question, the purpose of such announcement being to enable a contestant to elect a higher difficulty level to apply to a favored subject area. Thus, the response criteria may consist of a simple requirement to be met by a respondent, or may comprise a plurality of independently variable elements.
[0260] Questions may also be asked by a host in conjunction with television advertisements or “commercials”. In such an event, a host or off-camera announcer may first direct the attention of the audience to the fact that the next question will deal with an aspect or feature of the product or service about to be displayed or offered. Awards may also be announced. This type of incentive will significantly increase viewers' attention and recall.
[0261] Questions may also be visually posed to the television viewers by displaying the questions on electronic boards or on other display means. Alternatively, the host may silently point to an advertised item of merchandise to insure that participants are paying attention to the television commercial, in which event a question may relate to such merchandise. The awarding of prizes to viewers who correctly answer questions relating to goods or services shown in a preceding commercial is believed to greatly enhance consumer recall.
[0262] It is noted that a question asked with reference to an offered item may call for no more than a simple mention of the specimen displayed, or of specific features thereof. There is little or no difficulty in responding to such question posed to the viewers, so that in effect, the viewers are simply verifying that they are tuned in to the desired program. This method can be employed when discontinued items, or “loss leaders”, are intended to lead customers to a store, in which case more valuable prizes are awarded for relatively easy answers.
[0263] The range of difficulty levels needs no specific limitation. As an illustration, one may consider the task of listing within a period of 20 seconds as many countries as possible that are members of the United Nations.
[0264] The award or prize won by a successful contestant is computed in accordance with the response criteria and the scoring basis or mode which may be formulated by the host or program conductor. As noted above, the response criteria and the scoring mode or basis are transmitted from a central station to remote locations through the response-criteria and scoring-mode signals of the aforementioned Group Two. Specific and different response criteria may be set for each question, and may include a different time period allowed for such response. The instructional group of signals, Group Two, conveys the data constituting an acceptable answer or range of answers, as well as the value of the award to be given a successful contestant based on the applicable difficulty level, the accuracy and completeness of the answer to be provided. The elements of the response criteria may be varied from question to question.
[0265] The instructional group of signals, Group Two, may also contain, as a subset, additional command signals such as the above-noted validation signal to permit certification and verification of an award claimed by a contestant or member of the remote audience. Such data typically consists of alphanumeric information appearing on the contestant's printout to facilitate verification, but may also consist of coded data or symbols which are machine-readable in the place of redemption.
[0266] The instructional group of signals may also contain, as another subset, further additional command signals addressed to the scoring circuitry, which additional signals convey data governing the issue of the printout and its terms, including place of redemption and time limitations. A printout from the dispenser
[0267] The invention may be employed for conducting a sweepstake with results dependent on skill and knowledge of contestants. The printout provides a record of responses to insure that those who have successfully responded to an earlier question are properly responding to a later question. Awards for the sweepstake can be based on a selected difficulty level, so that those who are more knowledgeable get higher winnings.
[0268] As an example of various forms of programming which may be employed, questions are displayed on an electronic board seen by the television viewers. Alternatively, a question appears on a display board in the television studio and a plurality of numbered answers appear on a separate display so that a television contestant only needs to enter the number of the selected answer believed to correspond to an acceptable answer and to the response criteria. The latter type of visual presentation is particularly suitable for game shows involving multiple choice answers. Particularly successful, or otherwise selected participants, may engage in a personal dialogue with the host.
[0269] It is noted that members of the studio audience may also participate in the quiz program. In such event, one display may contain questions for the home viewing audiences, while the studio contestants may be asked a different set of questions. In such a situation, effectively, two separate quiz programs are being conducted substantially concurrently.
[0270] In conducting such television program, provisions may also be made to announce and/or display to the television audience information regarding awards that are to be won at different difficulty levels. This information may be provided before, during, or after the corresponding question has been asked, although it normally is made known to viewers at approximately the time that the question is asked. As an illustration, a split television screen technique may be employed wherein part of the screen displays information and/or pictures relating to the question being asked, and another part of the screen displays a table having tabulated information showing a relationship between difficulty levels, and available prizes or discounts from the base price towards the purchase of certain merchandise. If desired, a portion of the split-screen presentation may be hidden from the studio audience. The host announces the number of difficulty levels and the general subject area relative to each question. The host may also announce the base or minimum difficulty level applicable to a specific question so that each contestant has sufficient time to elect to respond under the conditions of the difficulty level set by the host or under conditions of a higher difficulty level. In accordance with the foregoing elected situations, requisite command signals of the instructional signal group, Group Two, are transmitted for directing the dispenser to print out such tabulated award data. Successful participants may be informed of the fact that they have won an award via the audio or video portion of the television signal, or by directing the dispenser to print out a message describing the award. The record or other signal by which a contestant is informed of the outcome of his or her response may be simply “award” or “no award” announcement, or a similar simple notification.
[0271] As a further feature in the construction of the invention, the scoring-mode signal generated at the keyboard
[0272] It is also noted that the card
[0273] Another interaction between members of the remote audience and the host is accomplished by means of the optional two-way communication afforded by use of the telephone circuit
[0274] The foregoing example in the teaching of a home-study course shows an aspect in the methodology of the invention in which a succession of instructional signals relating to designating acceptable responses and scoring criteria to be applied to responses may be transmitted from the central station
[0275] As a further example in the modification of scoring criteria, the studio audience and the remote audience may be engaged in a program for the development of foreign language skills. The host, in this case a language instructor, may submit a set of questions requiring responses in the form of phrases for describing situations depicted in a studio game. If members of the studio audience experience difficulty in answering the questions, then the host would use the keyboards
[0276] By way of further embodiment to the invention, it is noted that the tape
[0277] The foregoing examples in the use of the invention show that the system and methodology of the invention are adaptable to the needs of members of the remote audience. Adaptation can take place by interaction with members of the remote audience, as well as by anticipation of the needs of the remote audience based on observation of responses of the studio audience. This enhances the quality of audience participation, ensures better success in accomplishing the purposes of the television games, and elicits greater satisfaction on the part of both studio and remote audiences.
[0278] With reference to
[0279] It is also noted that the invention can be employed even in the situation wherein television may not be available to some members of the remote audience. With reference to the receiving station
[0280] Also, the microphone
[0281] Furthermore, the program can be conducted silently, as above, with occasional audio commentary and/or background music, a television format commonly employed by cable television news services. In this case the program and task-setting messages would be transmitted by television with visual presentation of the tasks by signs or posters with the microphone
[0282] The foregoing situation can be modified further by the substitution of the normal television program format by presentation of a television screen showing only lines of alphanumeric characters, similar to that of a printed portion of a magazine or newspaper. Such a format is used frequently in cable television news by broadcasts employing a channel known as an automated channel. With reference to
[0283] Normally, automated channels are used in cable television to provide information in visual alphanumeric or graphic form, utilizing a character generator, and transmitting news updates, financial news, program guides, catalog-shopping and price information, weather information and the like. If computer type storage is provided at receiving stations, text displayed in this manner on screens at receiving stations may be scrolled in a desired direction. A voice or music audio portion accompanies the visual information.
[0284] The automated channel type of television broadcast lends itself well to the presentation of questions and falls within the scope of the present invention. A Home Quiz program of the type described may consist entirely of questions, or the questions may be interspersed with the types of information listed above. As an example, a question is displayed on the screens at remote locations for the period of time allowed for answering the question, after which the data entering devices do no accept contestants' responses. The correct of a series of acceptable answers then appear on the screens for an interval of time enabling contestants to ascertain whether they have won an award as evidenced by a printout emitted by the dispenser. Alternatively, correct answers may be provided orally by a program conductor. Such broadcast requires only very limited studio facilities and is economical to produce. In this and other types of programs, the electronic equipment at remote locations can be very simple, providing only for yes-or-no answers, or can be as complex as is desired.
[0285] The type of question and answer broadcast on automated channels lends itself particularly well to education and research. In the field of education, after a time interval allowed for answering a question has expired, a correct answer may be provided orally or visually by the program host, and may be accompanied by extensive explanations and narratives. This method still enables students to mail or deliver examination papers dispensed to them by the electronic printer in the above-described dispenser to an educational institution conducting the test. Such examination forms have printed thereon each student's scored answers.
[0286] The use of automated channels permits the implementation of the methods described in a highly economical manner, particularly in the area of education of children. Incentives can be provided to children to take an interest in subjects to be taught by rewarding successful answers to questions which dispenses tokens, such as coupons, carrying an award of interest to children of the age group addressed. The increasing familiarity of children with computer keyboards makes the use of data entering devices a simple task. In the field of use of research, free-standing questions on automated channels may be interspersed with questions pertaining to research conducted. Some questions on automated channels are phrased so that the answers will provide statistically or otherwise meaningful responses, while other questions contain a challenge inherent in answering such a question. For example, a question may require personal judgment, special knowledge, or characterization.
[0287] As a further example, a demographic researcher may intersperse between questions regarding respondent's income and expenditures the question “What is the average annual per capita income in your county?”. A successful respondent wins an award in order to encourage wider participation in such a survey. In market research, the ability to leave a printed text on a cable television screen for a period of time, and to accompany a question with an oral explanation will not only make respondent's answers to such questions easier and therefore more reliable, but will make the conducting of surveys or automated channels a very economical method of reaching unprecedented numbers of respondents.
[0288] The methods and systems described above may advantageously be employed to attract television viewers to interactive programs in which prerecorded listings and information pertaining to merchandise and services are displayed on the TV-screens of viewers.
[0289] Typically, in the operation of such programs, prerecorded listings of available products would be televised and displayed on the TV-screens of remote viewers. The homes of such viewers would be wired, permitting individual ones of said viewers, utilizing well-known means for electronically transmitting signals to a central receiving station, to indicate a category or item of merchandise or services of particular interest, regarding which a viewer wishes to receive additional information. Such interactive means may transmit viewers request signals over wires or over the air. The additional information may include pictures of merchandise selected, prices, costs, performance characteristics, capacities, capabilities, sizes, colors, accessories, warranties and descriptions. Viewers might also select listings of product groups, similar products within a specified price range, products offered by one company or in one retail outlet, or firms offering a specified product within a geographic area. A request for more detailed information may, for example, produce a full page of specifications, along with a picture or pictures of one specific item of merchandise.
[0290] In a typical embodiment of implementing such a method, a manufacturer of goods or a supplier of services is given the opportunity to contract with the producer of an interactive broadcast program for the insertion of questions among the product data and offerings comprising the television program. Such questions can for example be interspersed between announcements pertaining to products offered by suppliers. The knowledge on the part of TV-viewers that meaningful prizes will be awarded for satisfactorily answering questions will result in attracting additional TV-viewers . Commercials by suppliers of products may be inserted into the listings and questions may relate directly to the commercial shown, which commercial may be a still photograph, A question may follow such a commercial. TV-viewers may be informed prior to the commercial that a question will follow the next commercial and will deal with the commercial. This technique will ensure that the television audience will pay close attention to such a commercial, especially if a valuable prize may be won at one of the aforementioned difficulty levels. Thus, the method described can be a potent advertising and promotional tool in the context of such an interactive program. Prizes awarded TV-viewers may be discounts on the products offered during the show.
[0291] Frequently, in television programs listing items of merchandise and services available to viewers, sometimes referred to as Videotext, interested viewers who are potential buyers have the opportunity to request additional or supplemental information over cable connections such as cable or telephone connections used for home computers. The purpose of such additional information is to help potential buyers to make up their minds whether the item is of interest. Additional listings requested can be progressively more detailed and can provide information of interest pertaining to an item of merchandise or services, such as information where such merchandise or services may be obtainable, alternatives and competitive -items and specifics such as prices, size, colors, capacities, performance, and other related information. It is in the interest of the producers of such shows which are frequently sponsored by advertisers, to induce viewers to call up additional information in the form of lists, specification sheets, pictures and other pertinent data. It therefore is an object of the method described to hold viewers interest and to induce them to request more detailed and specific information which may lead to a purchase decision. To achieve this, one or more questions are interspersed in successive presentations of said items of merchandise or services. The method follows and employs the steps enumerated in connection with the methods hereinbefore described. The question and the response criteria, as well as the ultimate answer to such a question are transmitted over the cable connection used in the television transmission.
[0292] In order to further induce participation in such television shows, the methodology of awarding prizes can be based on the required accumulation of credits for acceptable answers, i.e. on the requirement that, in order to win a prize, a participant must enter an acceptable answer to two or more questions. In such an instance, if a viewer answers a question correctly, the credit for such an acceptable answer is computed and stored at a viewer's remote location. If the producer of the show has determined that more than one acceptable answer is required to win a prize, viewers are informed, as part of the television program, that either a certain number of acceptable answers must be entered or that a certain cumulative total of credits must be earned to qualify for a prize. The scoring mode in this instance provide for coefficients in computing a total score which becomes progressively larger with each subsequent question. For instance, a viewer who continues to watch the program and ultimately answers three questions in an acceptable fashion, which can only be accomplished having called up at least two additional presentations of the offer, may win ten times the amount of the prize that would have been won for answering only the first of the three questions correctly.
[0293] The system provides for storing and accumulating credits for acceptable answers until either the end of the program or until either the end of the program or until the total number of questions has been reached. The producer of the show may announce to the viewers at any stage of the program how many questions will be asked and what scoring mode will be employed in the event more than one question is answered, including additional credits earned by answering questions at higher difficulty levels.
[0294] By way of further example, a television game show is conducted by another method providing at a central location the previous described transmitting facilities and providing at TV-viewers' remote locations response units, including comparison and scoring circuits with provisions for allocating credits at different difficulty levels. A plurality of questions is asked in the course of the show, acceptable answers being defined by response criteria at a basic difficulty level and at least one higher difficulty level, at which an acceptable answer earns a larger number of credits. Negative credits are allocated to answers not meeting the response criteria at a higher difficulty level elected, even if doing so at a lower level.
[0295] The method is further characterized by not instantly awarding prizes for each accepted answer, but to accumulate credits for all of the accepted answers entered by a TV-viewer in the response unit, based on the scoring mode which allocates a predetermined number of credits to each acceptable answer at the applicable difficulty level. A TV-viewer, by not specifically electing a higher difficulty level, in effect elects to respond at the basic difficulty level. Individual ones of the TV viewers are informed of credits earned or lost and also are informed of the monetary value of credits. At the end of the question and answer period, a recording device in the response unit provides winners with a record of total credits, which record may be a printed token, such as a coupon, or may be a magnetized card.
[0296] The method provides for penalizing a contestant for not answering or for unacceptably answering a question, irrespective of the difficulty level by deducting credits determined in accordance with the scoring mode from the accumulated credits of such viewer. The response criteria may be transmitted as an unobtrusive portion of the TV-signals, by optical means, over voice channels, or other means. The total number of credits earned by a viewer and a verification number or code provided on said record in accordance with instructional signals transmitted as fourth signals, may be phoned in by a contestant and the host announces a winner or winners near the end of the show.
[0297] FIGS.
[0298] In the ensuing description,
[0299] With reference to
[0300] The console
[0301] Each receiving station
[0302] The earphones
[0303] The connections of the screens
[0304] Each of the response units
[0305] By way of alternative embodiment, it is noted that recording/playback apparatus, such as the recorder
[0306] In a typical embodiment of the invention, a video tape is employed to display a map of the general area over which a plane is flying. An accompanying audio message provides questions to passengers wishing to participate, the questions pertaining to the geography, topography, demography, history, industry, resorts, sports and any other aspect of the region. It is an advantage of this method that the ground does not have to be visible to passengers, who will see the ground by video-tape presentation. Such programs can be sponsored by groups interested in promoting one or another aspect of natural or man-made resources of the area, such as Chambers of Commerce, historical societies, resorts, airlines, commercial sponsors, tourist offices of states and the like. A plurality of audio tapes pertaining to the same map, but containing different questions, may be prepared and used alternatively. Other variations and combinations may be devised.
[0307] In the foregoing embodiment, the video or audio tape serves as the recording medium upon which the program, tasks to be performed, appropriate answers against which responses are to be gauged, and scoring criteria are stored. However, in the practice of the invention, it is contemplated that other forms of data storage may become available to serve as the storage medium, such as optical discs and electronic circuitry such as a read-only memory.
[0308] According to another embodiment, each passenger is given a printed topographic map, which may or may not be of the region over which a plane flies or through which a mass transportation vehicle is traveling. Audio questions pertaining to the names or any other features not shown on the map have been prepared and stored on alternative tapes. The audio questions are received through headsets. Travelers responses can be marked on the maps, which can be evaluated and scored as described in the context of educational tests. Alternatively, contestants may enter their answers on a keypad, and the individual answers are evaluated and scored as described hereinabove. The methods described can easily be adapted for use in a variety of public locations, such as hotel rooms, restaurants, game arcades, auditoriums, trains, buses, and airplanes.
[0309] With reference to
[0310] In the central station
[0311] The system of
[0312] In
[0313] In operation, an output signal of the recorder
[0314] During playback of the game program of the aircraft cabin
[0315] In
[0316]
[0317] The system of
[0318] The bursts of data transmitted from the memories
[0319]
[0320] Synchronization of the response units
[0321] The signals played back are outputted by the circuitry
[0322]
[0323] In operation, the memory
[0324] Also included in the circuitry of
[0325] Thereby, the circuitry
[0326] A further advantage of the embodiments of the invention employing a prerecorded program is that various versions and formats of the program may be recorded. Thus, a recording with difficult-to-answer questions and a recording with easy-to-answer questions can be prepared. Questions involving a prior knowledge of history, economics, sports or other subject matter can be prepared on the same or separate records. Thereby, the flight attendant has the capacity, in essence, to reformat questions and instructions, as well as the subject matter being described, in response to preferences stated by respondents at the receiving stations. The reformatting of the program, instructional signals, and/or response and storing criteria are accomplished simply by fast-forwarding the recording tape to a further position, or by replacing the recording tape with another tape. The system of the invention may be installed in schools and hotels, as well as in homes.
[0327] An aspect of the invention combines the eliciting of an answer with the eliciting of a prediction. An example would be a sports event which has taken place a relatively long time prior to such a broadcast, say the U.S. Open Golf Championship held 10 years prior to the broadcast. A film of the tournament is shown and the prediction/response solicited pertains to the number of strokes taken by the eventual winner of the Championship on the third, par three hole, by way of example. This method permits a person with a good memory to recall the outcome of the event, i.e. responding to a question, the answer to which is known. But at the same time, the method permits a person not having observed the Championship, but having a knowledge of the game and the players, to make an educated guess or prediction.
[0328]
[0329] The switch
[0330]
[0331] The recording is based on the system described in
[0332] A private home or other location of a contestant may serve as a remote station which includes a telephone
[0333] The system
[0334] If desired, the system
[0335] Further options in the operation are as follows. In the absence of the television transmission
[0336] Also, by use of the control line
[0337] The modems
[0338] If desired, the conducting of the quiz or game show, or other type show, can be accomplished as has been described with reference to
[0339] One interesting aspect of the foregoing embodiment of the invention becomes apparent in a game show wherein remote contestants, namely, the contestants at the remote receiving stations, participate with the studio contestants in a game to win prizes, the prizes being awarded to both the studio and the remote contestants. As a simple example, consider roulette being played in the studio and observed via television at the remote stations. With reference to
[0340] In the description of embodiments of the invention disclosed in
[0341]
[0342] The entry unit
[0343]
[0344] In the TV system
[0345] Similarly, the clusters are identified further by the legends
[0346] The optical detector assembly
[0347] In operation, and with reference to
[0348] In the use of the code, there are six choices of colors or combinations of colors in a cluster
[0349] As shown in a graph
[0350] The white and colored code words of the graph
[0351] In the response unit
[0352] In the response unit
[0353] The display
[0354] With reference again to
[0355]
[0356] The response unit
[0357] A number of methods in accordance with aspects of the invention will now be described, the methods utilizing the electronic circuitry described herein. It is noted that the systems of the various aspects of the invention can be used to conduct contests, such as quiz shows wherein the answers to questions are known at the time the questions are asked. The systems however, also lend themselves to conducting games, contests or tasks involving predictions of the outcome of future events, including games of chance. While the methods for conducting such programs on radio or television programs vary, they all have the important common capability of informing members of the remote audience without delay whether the responses, predictions or gambles have met with success. The success may be defined as an acceptable response to a task or question, an acceptable prediction or the outcome of an event, or the winning of an award in a game of chance. When desired, each successful member of the audience may be issued a token or an award or prize virtually instantly after the success becomes known. The token may include a monetary prize. Its is noted that all of the methods described utilize electronic equipment at the locations of the viewer or listener to evaluate responses, and to award successful participants. The system does not require central computers, thereby obviating the need for simultaneously processing large numbers of viewer responses at a central location.
[0358] Many events, including games, can be implemented by the methodology of the invention. Such events take place on large and small defined areas ranging for instance from an 18-hole golf course to a football field and baseball diamond, and to a chess board. All of these areas have the characteristic in common of being able to be subdivided so as to identify portions thereof or locations thereon. Locations can be identified with the aid of grids with coordinates or other identifying plan to implement the methodology of aspects of the invention.
[0359] Frequently, in the course of a game, an object is moved by a person, and a prediction may be made as to the location to which the object moves. In some sports events the object moved is the body of the athlete himself. A TV-viewer follows the progress of such a game or contest and enters a prediction of an outcome on an entering device by identifying the area or point at which the object is anticipated to come to rest, or is to be placed by a person addressing the object. Such an observer normally can follow the unfolding of the event on a TV-screen. Following the event, such as in a football game, a track and field event, or a move by a chess player, the producers of the TV-show identify the actual location to which the object has moved. Coordinates of the location or other identification signals are transmitted to remote sites of the TV viewers, so as to permit comparing the actual location with the predicted location entered by television observers. Response criteria for evaluating the outcome of the predictions are similar to the previously described criteria of the instructional signals.
[0360] The prediction entering device prevents entries at or after the point in time when the object being addressed, moves, or when a participant, such as an athlete, commences action. The comparison and scoring circuits of the aforementioned entering and evaluating devices at remote locations identify and score acceptable predictions as defined by the instructional signals. A successful participant is informed, when desired by a dispensing of printed coupons or magnetized cards, as previously described, immediately following the relevant event or move of an object.
[0361] In televising such an event, the producers may superimpose a grid or coordinates on the television picture for the purpose of enabling observers to identify areas or points broadly or with as much specificity as is desired or practical under the circumstances. Such a grid is helpful in making predictions and in identifying outcome locations. A grid may be subdivided into portions of different dimensions.
[0362] It is advantageous that the above-described predictive method can be applied to a large variety of events and games in which an object is moved once or repeatedly, such games including, by way of example, baseball, football, golf, and chess. Depending on the size and configuration of the playing area, the area may be sub-divided into larger and smaller portions. A prediction of a smaller portion of the area to which an object may move, and therefore a more difficult prediction, is rewarded with a prize of greater value than a prediction pertaining to a larger portion. For example, a prediction in a golf match may pertain to the location of a hit ball on large areas, such as a fairway or rough, or on smaller areas, such as on the green, or even in the cup. Predictions may relate to the ultimate outcome of two or more intermittent events, such as the location of a golf ball after three strokes, the position of a chess piece after two moves, or the total number of hits of a baseball player at the end of five innings. To provide for such cumulative outcome predictions, data storage means as previously described, are included in an observer's evaluating device.
[0363] Events included in a broadcast contest to which predictions relate may be presented visually or audibly. In an aspect of the practice of the invention, a host or commentator asks for one or more predictions and if a plurality of predictions is available, a TV-viewer selects a prediction. If there exist two or more predictions, outcome criteria are provided for evaluating the response of an observer or contestant to all relevant outcomes, the outcome criteria being conveyed to remote locations after an announced event, or events, has occurred. In another embodiment, outcome criteria are conveyed relative to outcomes of events not specifically made known or announced by a host, such as the final order in which horses cross the finish line at the end of a race. This enables a TV-viewer to elect to predict an outcome not previously mentioned in the transmission from a central station, in the hope that outcome criteria relative to the prediction will nevertheless be conveyed and that a correct prediction of such unannounced event will be rewarded with a prize.
[0364] In case a participating TV viewer elects to predict the outcome of an event not specifically identified or announced by the host, the participant runs the risk that there will be no transmission of outcome criteria signals pertaining to that participant's prediction, thus ruling out all chances of winning a prize. It therefore is the twofold task of a TV-viewer in such a situation to anticipate which unannounced event hopefully will be provided with outcome criteria, and that the participant will correctly or acceptably predict the outcome. Awards for such successful predictions will be correspondingly higher.
[0365] In view of the fact that in the above described example the outcome criteria are conveyed to remote locations following the event to which the criteria relate, the success or outcome criteria may be transmitted in uncoded and visually or audibly intelligible form. When conveyed, in such open language, the response criteria can serve to inform members of the remote audience of the event which was selected for inclusion in the contest and to advise the members of the outcome of the event.
[0366] A further use of the invention in conjunction with telephone facilities, as disclosed in
[0367] According to an aspect of the present invention, a tape playing facility is provided at a central telephone station as a subscriber service. Tapes with prerecorded audio or audiovisual recordings are played back to receivers at remote locations over cable or over dedicated telephone lines, using modems when required.
[0368] In a preferred embodiment, a question and answer game is conducted, and a user of or subscriber to the telephone service who answers a question in an acceptable manner receives an award as heretofore described. To conduct such a game, the contents of a tape are formulated and recorded, including one or more sets of messages. Each prerecorded message set comprises a question and an instructional signal conveying answer criteria defining at least one correct or acceptable answer.
[0369] The question is received in a form intelligible to humans and normally is accompanied by an indication of the period of time a respondent has to enter a response on a data entering device. If the response or answer criteria are transmitted prior to the expiration of the allowed time interval, they are in coded or unintelligible form. if the response criteria are transmitted following the time interval, they can be in open language or other intelligible form. In the latter case, response or answer criteria may consist of the actual correct answer or answers.
[0370] The answer criteria may include scoring instructions. If different levels of difficulty are available, the scoring instructions convey the methodology or mode of computing the amount of a prize awarded for acceptable answers at different levels of difficulty.
[0371] At remote locations of members of the telephone audience, as described above, members are provided with an electronic response and evaluation unit, which as a minimum, includes a response entering device, means for comparing an entered response to an acceptable response, a timing device and means for informing a user of the telephone service of an earned award. It is understood, of course, that communications equipment is available to a user for contacting the central facility providing the service, in order to request the playback of a tape. Appropriate means for audibly and/or visually presenting the contents of the tape and for informing contestants of an award are provided.
[0372] In those instances where response criteria are received at remote locations after the time interval allowed for responding to a task has expired, the response criteria can include signals conveying one or more correct or acceptable responses in both an instructional form and in an informative form. The signals, when in instructional, normally unintelligible digital form, are capable of activating and controlling circuits, such as the scoring elements of the response units and, when converted into informative, intelligible form serve to notify game participants of winning answers. When response criteria or responses are transmitted prior to the end of the allowed time interval, transmission is rendered unintelligible by coding or changing the speed of transmission of the signals. Depending on the time of transmission before or after the elapsing of the time interval, the answer criteria therefore may be unintelligible or may comprise the actual acceptable answers in open language.
[0373] According to a preferred embodiment of the method, a question and answer game is prerecorded on a magnetic tape as previously described. A question is posed and a time limit, for example, of ten seconds is announced in open language, visually and/or audibly. At the same time a participant's electronic unit is directed by instructional signals to accept an entry by a participant for the following ten seconds and then to evaluate the entered response in accordance with response criteria. During these ten seconds, there is either no recording or, if desired, a musical recording provided on the tape. Following expiration of the ten second time interval, one or more acceptable and previously recorded answers are announced in open language. The comparison and scoring means evaluate a participant's entry relative to the transmitted response criteria. A successful respondent is informed in a known manner, which can include the dispensing of a monetary prize as described. Questions and answers may be at two or more difficulty levels as described hereinabove.
[0374] In the operation of the system, a dedicated telephone line may be coupled to a playback device which plays back one specific tape or one of a specific group of tapes selected by a subscriber to the telephone service. Thus, by calling a number, the caller will automatically receive a playback of a particular tape. The equipment at a subscriber's remote location comprises a sub-system, including the equipment for two-way communication between the remote location and the central facilities and further including the elements of the response unit for entering and evaluating answers. The two way communication equipment may include means not only for directing a multiple digit call to a dedicated number, but also for automatically activating means controlling the tape playback mechanism. The sub-system may include means requiring only the lifting of a receiver or the pushing of one button to activate the playback of a tape at a central location for transmission to the caller's location.
[0375] When desired, the equipment at a subscriber's remote location includes previously described means for selecting one of several difficulty levels chosen by a contestant, answers at a higher difficulty level being rewarded with a larger prize. And, as previously described, means are provided for generating a hard copy record of an award earned by a participant, these means being capable of printing on a coupon or magnetizing a plastic card so as to indicate the value of an award, normally a monetary prize. The response unit in cooperation with a modem (
[0376] The method and system may be modified so that every time a subscriber dials a dedicated number, such a call automatically authorizes the operator of the service to charge an amount to the caller, which amount can be on a per use basis, on a time basis, or can be determined by the caller.
[0377] When desired by a participant, a prize amount can be electronically transferred by the subscription service to a bank account of the participant so that the amount of the prize is immediately available to the winner in such a game.
[0378] In another version of the present invention, members of a remote audience wager on the outcome of an event. Members can place bets on the accuracy of their respective predictions, but do not necessarily play against other members of the audience.
[0379] Using a two-way communication system a participant, who has a line of credit with an operator of a televised event, may choose a specific event and stipulate the amount of a wager on the outcome of the event on which the participant wishes to bet. Events, the outcome of which can be predicted, include sports, elections, polls, and other kinds of happenings, the outcomes of which are capable of being defined in terms of results, scores, points, decisions, and other measurements.
[0380] With reference to
[0381] Following authorization by the subscriber, the operator of the central service initiates the playing of a recording or the transmission of a broadcast and activates a sub-system of the subscriber, normally located at the subscriber's home. In addition, the service operator accepts a bet on a specified outcome of an event, such acceptance being done by a human operator or through electronic communication. Thus, for example, within a bettor's line of credit, a bettor who dials a 900-number and additional digits, can place a bet and, by dialing a specific number of digits, the event and amount of a bet can be specified by the subscriber.
[0382] At a central location, which may be the same as or different from that at which the central telephone facility is located, events are broadcast to subscribers' remote locations and the outcomes of events are monitored. Broadcast signals of such events are transmitted to and received at remote locations, so that subscribers can follow the progress of events as they unfold. Outcome criteria signals defining the outcome of an event in absolute terms or in relation to the predictions and wagers are transmitted to subscribers at remote locations.
[0383] The response unit at an subscriber's location informs the subscriber of a successful prediction by generating and dispensing to a successful bettor a token of a winning bet, such token being a printed coupon or magnetized card. The response unit also scores a winning prediction in accordance with an applicable difficulty level.
[0384] Payments computed and payable to or by a bettor can be debited or credited to a bettor's account or monthly statements, or can be reflected directly on the bettor's bank account. Alternatively, when a winning token is generated and dispensed, the token which has the amount won indicated thereon, can be submitted for credit to the operator of the service, to a bank, or to another redemption center.
[0385] Following authorization of applicable charges, a subscriber's sub-system can, when appropriate, be made operative by signals sent over telephone wires or by another form of communication, including wireless and cable systems. According to another aspect of the method, the subscriber's sub-system can be activated by the subscriber, and a hard copy record of a successfully predicted outcome is dispensed to the observer of an event. This method is preferred when subscribers do not wish to place bets, as may be the case in a home or in a public place in which members of a family or friends are gathered, or when betting is illegal. Records issued in such an instance have no commercial value unless validated by a verification number or a code which is only provided upon a subscriber's having authorized an appropriate charge by the central telephone or subscriber service. Verification data are transmitted to remote locations via a communication link such as a telephone line or cable.
[0386] As an example of operating the system, two central facilities are provided, one being a telephone subscriber service and the other being a station televising a sports event, such as a boxing bout. Viewers are informed that they can wager on the outcome of each round or on the final outcome of the bout, the wager being a win, lose, or draw. Viewers also are informed that boxer A is a favorite over boxer B and that a successful wager on boxer B will be rewarded with 200% of the amount of the wager, whereas a successful wager on boxer will be rewarded with 125% of the amount of the wager. Subscribers to the telephone service then dial a dedicated number, including additional digits specifying a chosen round and/or the final result and the amount wagered on each outcome.
[0387] Viewers watch the event on television and at the end of each round and/or of the bout, instructional signals are sent from the central broadcast facility to remote locations defining each outcome and providing scoring instructions to subscriber response units for computing the amount won by a successful subscriber.
[0388] The invention may be applied to a game which is conducted from a central location and enables players at remote locations to win prizes delivered instantly at each player's location. Prizes normally take the form of tokens redeemable for cash.
[0389] In an adaptation of the system described, players are provided with a response unit and recording medium for the outputting of hard copy with a recording of identifiable data. A first set of data has been provided on the recording medium prior to delivery thereof to the players. The data may be presented as alphanumeric or other symbols. For example, a set data may comprise a combination of six letters and numbers which have been prerecorded on a tamper-resisting recording medium.
[0390] The recording medium may consist of a paper tape divisible into sections or it may consist of a plastic card having data magnetically recorded thereon. In any event, such token or recording medium is capable of being placed in the response unit for the purpose of having recorded thereon at least one additional second set of alphanumeric data or symbols. Signals from a central station serve the purpose of conveying data and controlling the printer of the response unit.
[0391] In the operation of such a system, a second set of data may comprise, for example, six letters and/or numbers selected or picked at random at a central location. Signals conveying the data are electronically transmitted to remote locations. Transmission can take place over the air or by wire. The central transmitting facility is adapted to activate and direct the printers to print the second set of data. The printer also is directed then to print a third set of data on the recording medium, the third set of data consisting of a verification code or number.
[0392] The recording medium, which in this instance is a paper tape, can be separated into sections, each section containing the first and second sets of numbers or letters, as well as the verification code.
[0393] A player therefore receives a recording medium with at least three sets of data, which data may be readable by individuals and/or may be machine readable.
[0394] If the game is played as a lottery, a winning recording medium is one which has two sets of alphanumeric data or other symbols, which either match completely, match partially, or have some other previously defined correlation. Partially matching sets of data can be rewarded with small prizes which become larger as more of the digits match. Other forms of correlation can be established, whether mathematical or not, including for instance multiples and fractions.
[0395] When desired, the central transmission facility can instruct the printer to record additional information on the recording medium. The response unit compares the two sets of alphanumeric or other data mentioned, computes the amount of a prize in accordance with instructional signals transmitted from a central location, and indicates the amount of the prize on the recording medium.
[0396] According to a preferred embodiment of the method employed in the system described, a player is able to discern whether two sets of alphanumeric data on the recording medium are a match, a partial match, or have some other correlation; but the player may not know the amount of the monetary prize presented on the outputted recording medium. The medium, which may be a printed coupon or a magnetized card is delivered by a winning player to a redemption center where the player is informed of the size of the prize. Such a redemption center may be a place of business, for example, a store in which such a prize evidenced by a printed coupon or magnetized card may be redeemed for cash and /or merchandise. This method of informing players that they have won a prize, without knowing its amount, is utilized to attract buyers to a place of business. The above method and system permit conducting a game similar to a lottery by retail businesses, which game is purely a game of chance and in which players at home may participate without charge to them.
[0397] Yet another feature of the invention is demonstrated with respect to
[0398] This feature may be demonstrated, by way of example, by constructing the recorder
[0399] With reference to
[0400] A specific type of award is associated with specific types or categories of questions which a contestant may select in order to avail himself or herself the benefit of a preferred category of award. Thus, a contestants choice of area of interest may be based on the subject matter of the questions or on the nature of the award. This capacity for selecting an area of interest greatly increases the chance that a contestant will participate, and that the contestant will redeem the coupon. Fortunately, as will be shown in the ensuing description, this aspect of the invention can be practiced with a response unit, such as the response unit
[0401] The addressing of the memories is demonstrated in
[0402] To practice the invention, the response unit
[0403] The capacity to select an area of interest is particularly useful for the merchandising of products with the aid of a game show broadcast from the central station
[0404]
[0405] An advantage in the use of the computer
[0406] In some cases, it may be desirable to provide the functions of comparing responses with acceptable answers, identifying acceptable responses, and scoring the acceptable responses at a central station such as the central station
[0407]
[0408] The procedure advances to block
[0409] The computer again checks the keyboard at block
[0410] The teachings presented in the preceding embodiments for the systems and methods of the invention are applicable generally to the selection aspect of the invention providing the product choice and choice of area of interest. The following discussion amplifies the description of the practice of the selection aspect of the invention to provide a full appreciation thereof.
[0411] In many instances, local or regional suppliers of goods and services develop their own and highly focused marketing priorities. As an example, a local retailer may wish to dispose rapidly of certain excess inventory or of perishable goods. Nationally broadcast programs may not be the most suitable forum for such promotions.
[0412] Frequently, suppliers prefer to sponsor a coupon program directed at local or regional audiences. Until now, however, local newspapers have been the only forum of any consequences available to such local sponsors for detailed product offers.
[0413] The discounts or prizes are in many instances applicable to merchandise sold in stores and supermarkets. Specifically included are children's stores. When desired, the products to which a discount applies may also include such items as admission tickets, travel tickets, total accommodations, subscriptions, vouchers, personal and any other marketable services, including service agreements.
[0414] The components of the several systems and methods for practicing the invention will now be described.
[0415] A central broadcasting facility includes the normal elements for transmitting a program. For purposes of illustration, the invention will be described in terms of television, but is equally applicable to radio.
[0416] The television program is received and presented on standard TV-receivers at viewers' remote locations. The program includes one or more tasks, such as questions. Members of the broadcast audience who wish to become contestants on the spur of the moment are informed of the time allowed for a response to each announced task.
[0417] Each task is accompanied by one or more predetermined acceptable responses. Instructional signals conveying response criteria defining acceptable responses are electronically transmitted from a central facility to remote locations, said signals being referred to as response criteria signals. They include data conveying the allowed period of time and mode for scoring an acceptable response, i.e. for assigning a calculated value to the prize coupon dispensed to a successful contestant. The response criteria are received at remote locations and may be modified or reformatted by a conductor of the program from task to task.
[0418] The electronic transmission can be done in any known manner: it can be on a radio frequency, via optical or light impulse codes, via cable, vertical blanking intervals or other means.
[0419] If desired, a task, such as a question, may be answered at one or more levels of difficulty. If there is more than one level of difficulty, the lowest or base difficulty level normally is selected by the broadcaster and a higher difficulty level may be selected by a respondent. Means for such selection are provided to the broadcaster and to each member of said audience.
[0420] Another group of predetermined signals is transmitted from a central broadcasting facility to remote locations conveying a listing of or information pertaining to the products of sponsors of such a broadcast. The term “product” includes goods and services whether specifically promoted in the course of such a broadcast, such as a commercial, or only appearing in the product listing of a sponsor. The information conveyed by these broadcast signals is referred to as product signals and comprises prices, specifications, availability and discounts applicable to specified products. Product signals may also include “sales”, “specials”, free samples and any other information pertaining to such products and deemed useful by a sponsor. The product information is modified or reformatted as determined by a sponsor.
[0421] Members of the broadcast audience are equipped with means for receiving and presenting the broadcast program, which includes tasks or may essentially consist only of tasks. Members of said audience have means to receive the response criteria signals and the product signals, the data for both being stored in appropriate storage means at members' locations. The product signals can include all the promotional data mentioned. Product information may be presented to viewers on a standard TV-set or on a separate screen or display. In addition, members are provided with means to enter a response to a task, such response data also being stored at members' locations.
[0422] The response criteria data product data, when modified, replace or supersede any previously stored data of the same nature. Response criteria include, when desired, a formula for placing a value on an acceptable response, referred to as scoring mode.
[0423] The means provided at members' locations for displaying the latest product list and other information desired by sponsors permit sponsors or broadcasters to delete, substitute, add or modify information. Audience members are equipped with means for individually selecting from said product list a product they prefer and intend to purchase. Said selecting means may be separate, or may be associated with the means for entering a viewer's response to a task.
[0424] The equipment provided at each remote location normally includes signal receiving means and presentation means for the program, task and product information; signal receiving means for response criteria; entering means for response and product selection; data storage means; comparing and scoring means; and means for generating and dispensing a prize token.
[0425] The above mentioned means at contestants' locations may conveniently be combined into a response unit.
[0426] The methods described lend themselves well to narrowcasting. The term narrowcasting is defined as the ability to transmit product or service information to a select group of members of a broadcast audience. The present method described, which dispenses prizes to individuals intending to purchase a specified product or products, narrowcasts product information because only viewers with a discount incentive will use the product information. Conversely, product information can be utilized only by viewers who have earned a prize through skill and have qualified for a discount applicable to a selected product.
[0427] A response entered by a member and stored, if necessary, is compared by comparison means with the applicable response criteria. A winning contestant's prize is calculated by scoring means on the basis of the applicable scoring mode. The product selection and a winning respondents score are outputted to a device at each contestant's location for generating a permanent record, such as a coupon, which, when dispensed, has provided thereon an indication of the prize and of the chosen product, including any sales or redemption information the advertiser wants the shoppers to have. In some instances, only one mode of scoring may be desired. This is the case if only one fixed award is to be made to winners obviating the computation of a score. An example would be a “true or false” type of answer. Such a single fixed award is made to all successful participants in case a sponsor intends to introduce a new product, in which event winning contestants are given the opportunity to select a free sample from a number of different available products. The chosen product is then specified on a prize coupon.
[0428] The device for generating a permanent record normally comprises a printer capable of printing or otherwise marking on a substrate, i.e. the recording medium, the award information, product information, redemption terms and a verification number; the record, such as coupon, includes commercial messages, including advertisements and announcements of special events and prizes. When desired, prizes may be awarded to a successful contestant over and above the award for an acceptable response; examples being “blind” or sweepstake prizes.
[0429] The term “prize” is intended to include all forms of rewards, such as cash, prizes, discounts, free merchandise, other financial and non-financial benefits, certificates, recondition or benefits. The terms “prize” and “discount” as used herein may occasionally be interchangeable.
[0430] The term “redeem” is intended to include the collection of a prize by delivering or presenting a coupon personally, through the mail, or other forms of obtaining a prize upon surrendering or in exchange for a coupon.
[0431] The term “sales outlet” is intended to include retail and public stores, redemption centers, catalog centers and all sales location whether accessed in person or by mail.
[0432] The word “conductor” or “host” as used for instance in the term “conductor of a broadcast transmission” is intended to include the individuals engaged in the operation of formulating a message or program for broadcasting on behalf of an advertiser, manufacturer, store or sponsor.
[0433] The term “dissimilar” is intended to include the meaning of different and non-identical.
[0434] The term “shopper” is intended to include individuals who are potential buyers of products and services.
[0435] The term “scoring basis” is intended to include complex scoring based on a formula, credits earned, difficulty level, time consumed and other criteria, as well as an automatic or fixed scoring basis, such as a single and universally applicable score as would be applied to a “yes or no” answer. An example of a fixed scoring basis would be a 10% discount prize for every correct answer entered within the allowed time limit.
[0436] A “correlation” of alphanumeric or other symbols may take the form of a complete or partial match or any other mathematical or predetermined correlation thereof.
[0437] The term “listing” as in “product listing” is intended to include the names of products, their specifications, prizes, discounts and other product information.
[0438] The term “matching” is intended to include any predetermined correlation of alphanumerics or symbols.
[0439] The term “superior” as in “superior response” is intended to include answers, response and predictions that are more accurate, more comprehensive, more responsive or entered within a shorter period of time.
[0440] The term “acceptable response” is intended to include answers to questions and prediction of events which are wholly correct, or sufficiently or in part correct, or which otherwise qualify for a prize, discount, recognition or award.
[0441] The term “conjointly” as used herein refers to the transmission and reception of electronic signals and the presentation of a task-setting message and of product information conveyed by said signals in combination, taking place partially or entirely concurrently or following each other so as to form a joined presentation.
[0442] The signals electronically transmitted and conveying task messages are referred to as the task-setting signals. The signals, electronically transmitted and conveying the response criteria are referred to as the response criteria signals. The signals electronically transmitted and conveying a product list or product information are referred to as product information signals. The signals electronically transmitted and conveying the outcome criteria of a prediction are referred to as outcome or success criteria.
[0443] The product signals may include information regarding additional or special discounts or other prizes over and above, and unrelated to, the coupon prize. For example, a product listing may include under one or more products the statement “The purchase of this product doubles your coupon prize”. This form of direct marketing gives managers a great deal of maneuverability including sales on short notice. These types of messages presented to shoppers for instance on a TV-terminal, or LCD-screen, or appearing on prize coupons, can be modified upon a seller's instructions on very short notice, such as through telephonic instructions by a store manager to a broadcast station which transmits the response criteria and other instructional signals.
[0444] Typically, the printer includes means for storing a recording medium, for instance a continuous paper tape which, following the printing of a coupon, is severed or divided into coupon sections. According to the present invention, the device includes known means capable of dispensing tokens, such as coupons of larger or smaller size, depending on the amount of text printed on such coupon and having desired configurations. When desired, for example in the case of an educational quiz as described below, the printer can be designed for the presentation of graphics or it can take the form of a telefax device capable of depicting pictures, drawings and the like.
[0445] Using the present methods and the systems described, a broadcaster or a sponsor formulates task sets, the sets each comprising task-setting and response criteria signals, being broadcast successively. Tasks may be interspersed in programs or program segments and may be broadcast individually or intermittently. Each task is accompanied by one or more acceptable responses. One acceptable response may apply to more than one task, such as the answer “yes” applying to a number of questions. A task-setting message can comprise a question requiring an answer, or a solicitation or request for a prediction of the outcome of a future event. Operationally, these two types of task-setting messages and shoppers' responses thereto are treated similarly, except that in the case of a question, the period of time allowed for entering an answer normally is fixed, whereas in the case of a prediction, the entering or further entering of predictive information of the modification of predictions is not necessarily inhibited after a fixed period of time, but is inhibited prior to or at approximately the time of the occurrence of the event.
[0446] The response criteria signals are broadcast from a central location, which may or may not be the location of the task broadcast. The product information signals normally are broadcast but may be broadcast from another central location. The product signals may be modified at any time as directed by a sponsor.
[0447] In the operation of the system described, a retailer prepares a listing of products selected for sales promotion in the target market. The products selected may be designated by name, but often are numbered and may be divided into categories. The products listings displayed at members' locations are grouped accordingly. If the product listing of a sponsor is lengthy, it can be displayed to members in successive segments or groupings. This is achieved by the use of known display and scrolling devices. Members' display devices may also be adapted to display and re-display successive listings of products or lists of numbered products in different categories as and when desired and such additional lists may be called up in sequence by a member of the broadcast audience until a desired product category and/or a specific product is displayed which a member intends to buy.
[0448] When preferred, the entire presentation of product information can be performed on television. In that event, the product listing can be shown on the television screen and the instructional signals are transmitted on the audio sideband frequency of the TV-program. Alternatively, the product listing can be shown on a liquid crystal display or on a small, separate, passive TV-screen. Both the passive terminal and the response unit include comparison, scoring and printing circuits receiving their radio command signals via a TV-audio or radio sub-carrier.
[0449] Using the split-screen television technique, the product information can conveniently be displayed along with other portions of the TV-program. This method is particularly easy and economical to implement on an automated cable channel, which for example can display concurrently a question and a product list.
[0450] The selected product is identified by touching numbered buttons on a respondent's entry device, or by other means. This selection is outputted to and is stored in a memory coupled to the printer or to means for computing the coupon value. The coupons may carry the same percentage value, but a different value in absolute terms, depending on the price of the merchandise. For example, for the same correct answer a $5.00 item selected by a contestant may be subject to a $0.50 discount, whereas a $2.50 item is subject to a $0.25 discount, the computation being performed by scoring means. In order to accommodate a variety of differently priced products, the coupon value can be expressed in terms of a percentage discount applicable to any product selected by a member.
[0451] If a higher difficulty level is chosen, the absolute monetary award or the percentage of the discount is raised. As an example, at the basic or first level of difficulty, the discount is 10%, at level two it is 15% and at level three it is 20%.
[0452] The response unit may include a self-contained memory which lists products for long term use. Memories of this kind, such as boards or cards for use in the response units, may be in interchangeable form for substitution in the response unit as required. For example, when a member receives a new coupon tape, whether in the mail or through personal pickup at a store, a sponsor may utilize the opportunity to provide such a member with a revised memory board which is supplied to such member along with the new tape and inserted in or connected to the response unit. Such revised memory is valid until replaced. Normally, the product listings assign numbers to individual products for use by shoppers. The response units at members' remote locations may be equipped with a memory capable of retaining all of the product items of a retailer for a predetermined period of time. Products may be numbered permanently or on an ad hoc basis. Periodically, say every day, the retailer conveys a listing of the names or numbers of products selected for promotion on that day. A sponsor's product listing may be stored in a memory for extended periods of time. The memory may be part of the display means permanently storing product information. The shopper is provided with control means to activate the screen displaying such listing at any time and further is provided with means to enter and indicate one or more items of interest to such shopper in the near future.
[0453] The selection of said item is stored in a memory coupled to the means informing shoppers of items chosen by the sponsor for promotion. The display and selection means are further provided with comparing means and alarm means, visual or audible, to inform or alert a shopper when the item of interest to the shopper is one chosen by the sponsor to which a prize is applicable. This method enables shoppers to wait until an item on a shopper's marketing list is announced as one eligible for a special prize and then attempt to qualify for such a prize by responding to a question. In such an event a shopper's product selection is entered prior to the entering of an answer or prediction.
[0454] Prize coupons can be redeemed at a sales outlet specified on said coupon; other provisions may appear on coupons, such as dates and terms of redemption. A discount or other prize specified on a coupon may be made applicable to a group or mixture of products which includes the product specifically selected by the contestant, as well as other products to be promoted. Coupons may be redeemed in person, by mail, or by telephone using the validation code on the coupons to verify its authenticity.
[0455] In an alternative embodiment, contestants' display means are directed by the product signals to display only the names or numbers of product items selected by a sponsor from the comprehensive listing of products permanently stored in the memory of the response units. The product numbers thus displayed and applying for example to a “special” on sale the same day may be changed easily and quickly. A sponsor may provide printed lists of all products to viewers, each product being permanently numbered so that a viewer can relate a broadcast product number to a specific product.
[0456] When preferred, the entire presentation of product information can be performed on television. In that event, the product listing can be shown on the television screen, using for example the split screen or window technique, and the instructional signals can be transmitted on the audio sideband frequency of the TV-program. Alternatively, the product listing can be shown on a small, separate, passive terminal screen, which can be part of the response unit.
[0457] The methods provide, when desired, for an announcement of product information by the host of a TV-broadcast. This embodiment is preferred when the information is to be particularly emphasized or relayed to the public as quickly as possible. In that event, the host indicates to members of the broadcast audience the products or the reference numbers applying to specific products, so that a contestant, by touching appropriate buttons on a keypad of the response unit, can designate the product which is to be identified on the coupon dispensed to a successful contestant. An on-stage or off-stage announcer can orally describe the product and related information, while the corresponding visual information can be retained on the screen for as long as is desired.
[0458] The present invention has applications in areas other than the promotion of commercial merchandise. An example is an inventory of perishable produce which will have to be discarded, unless sold within 48 hours. A “special” on such produce can be announced on very short notice, the produce carrying a 40% discount if purchased within 48 hours. The following day, the discount provided on prize coupons can be raised to 75%, if the produce is purchased that same day. It is evident that a store manager will prefer to salvage 25% of the retail value of a product to a total loss. As an additional promotion device, the basic level of difficulty in answering a question can be dropped, so as to generate an even larger number of prize winning shoppers. As an illustration, in the example, a product selection may be left unchanged for all tasks presented, or may be changed when the desired number or quantity of products has been reached to which the prizes won by such a member are applicable. The system can be adapted to permit contestants to select more than one product to be specified on a prize coupon, provided all of such products are included in the listing of products eligible for discounted purchase.
[0459] A prize can be made available to a shopper in the form of a coupon carrying a discount on a product or in another form, such as a cash prize, a credit or other benefit collected personally, by telephone, or through the mail.
[0460] In an alternative embodiment of the present method, the broadcaster or organizer of a program composes and provides to viewers product listings supplied by a plurality of sponsors. In such an event a program initiator periodically collects information from several local suppliers with respect to the products each of them wishes to promote. Based on such information, the program initiator or broadcaster than prepares a composite listing of appropriately numbered products available from a plurality of suppliers, which listing is announced and/or displayed to the remote audience on their display screens. The response criteria signals instruct the printer to output a hard copy record stipulating the sales outlet at which the products of the respective sponsors can be purchased using a discount token.
[0461] Thus, the latest product information can be conveyed to members of the remote audience and can be updated at any time. A sponsor can alter the instructional signals by making a telephone call to the local FM-station. This adds a great deal of flexibility to the promotional efforts of regional producers and local retailers. Obviously, the principle of the systems and methods described can be applied also to national broadcasts. In that event, the sponsors of an advertising campaign or program lists only products to be promoted on a nationwide basis.
[0462] It will be clear from the description of the coupons that, apart from carrying a prize, the coupons can serve a an effective direct marketing tool having advantages which no other form of promotion can match. The methods of the present invention make it practical and economical to combine the delivery in a shopper's home of a promotional hard copy record representing a financial award with sales information of specific interest to the winner of the prize at the time of receipt. The fact that the contestant has specified a product selected for intended purchase signifies that such a shopper is likely to visit the sponsor's store and examine the coupon and its other promotional messages closely. Being in the sore and exposed to another product promoted on the coupon, the contestant will at least seriously think about the other products promoted.
[0463] As an example, a dispensed coupon can carry a discount on a first product selected by a TV-viewer and, in addition, can carry a “buy one, get one free” message regarding a second product, the latter product being much more likely to be purchased once a shopper has entered a sales outlet than if the product had been the subject of a free-standing magazine insert.
[0464] Thus, a prize coupon carrying a discount on a first specified product and redeemable in a specified sales outlet, can be utilized to attract a shopper to said sales outlet in order to induce said shopper to purchase a second product available in the same sales outlet, said coupon carrying an additional discount or prize on a second product.
[0465] Coupons dispensed to winners bear a verification number or code. When desired, sweepstake or other prizes may be awarded in addition to the prizes applicable to scored responses, such additional prizes being awarded to a small number of winners determined in any suitable fashion.
[0466] Such additional prize information is conveyed to members' locations through the transmission of additional response criteria signals. For example, if the verification code consists of six digits, the last three digits in their specific order may constitute the “lucky number” of the day, if matched by a 3-digit number chosen by a sponsor on that day, entitling the holder of the winning coupon to an additional prize upon redemption of the coupon in a sales establishment or other specified location. The three digits chosen by the sponsor or broadcaster can be revealed at the place of redemption, or can be transmitted with the response criteria signals. The number of such additional prizes, which can range up to the value of sweepstake prizes, is controllable. In the above instance, the number of winning coupons is one per thousand coupons dispensed.
[0467] The fact that a prize coupon is issued only to contestants who have won it through skill, make it legally permissible in many locations to attach larger or even sweepstake prizes to such coupons. The delivery of a prize-winning record at a sales location preferably it tied to the personal delivery thereof, but may also be performed by using the mail or telephone.
[0468] The present invention combines practical, psychological and financial inducements to bring about an increased rate of coupon redemption by television viewers and radio listeners. A member of the broadcast audience who has selected a product because its purchase is timely, who wins a discount prize through personal skill, and who will save on the purchase of the product, is very likely to redeem such a prize coupon by buying the product at the specified sales outlet.
[0469] A number of additional methods intended to induce TV-viewers to redeem coupons will not be described. The instructional signals directing the response units at viewers' locations to generate a token, such a coupon, direct the coupon generator or printer to generate and dispense to one successful contestant more than one coupon at a time. Multiple coupons may be awarded for superior responses. For example, a total prize may be awarded in the form of three coupons redeemable upon purchase of two or more items or kinds of merchandise, or a total prize may be awarded consisting of two identical coupons for the same merchandise. Additional coupons may be dispensed for one acceptable response at a high difficulty level or for an exceptionally comprehensive answer. If more than one coupon is awarded for one response, the two or more coupons may have different values, redemption dates or places of redemption, in order to increase the number of shoppers attracted to sales establishments on any given day or to induce a shopper to visit a place of redemption more than once.
[0470] In another embodiment of the methods described, coupons dispensed to winners of an award are provided with first code symbols, said symbols varying from coupon to coupon, an example being consecutive six-digit numbers. The first code symbols may have previously been provided on said coupons, for instance on the coupon tape prior to the insertion of said tape into the coupon generating means. The first code symbols can also be provided on the coupons at approximately at the time of or subsequent to the printing of the prize indication. The first and second codes together constitute a winning combination if they match or bear a predetermined correlation, said correlation having been determined by an organizer of the broadcast, such as a sponsor, or advertiser. As an example, in the case of a six-digit number code, a correlation may be determined to exist if the last three digits on such a coupon match. Other code forms may be devised. Winning codes or code combinations normally are not intelligible, i.e. not identifiable as a winning code, by a contestant at his location and are revealed to a shopper only at the place of redemption of the prize coupon.
[0471] A code may be alphanumerical and/or comprise other symbols, which code is only machine-readable at the place of redemption, so that the bearer of such a coupon will not know whether a prize coupon caries an additional prize until and until and unless said coupon is redeemed. The opportunity of winning an additional “blind” prize, the value of which is not discernible by a contestant who already has won a prize through skill, i.e. by correctly answering a question, will in many instances be the decisive factor that will make the holder of such a coupon decide to visit a store or other place of redemption. A coupon may carry a discount applicable to the price of a first selected product as described, and in addition, the generating means, such as a printer, may be directed by the instructional signals to provide on the coupon indications of an additional prize or other benefit tied to the purchase of a second product. The second product may be specified by the contestant, or it may be specified by a sponsor, or it may be an unspecified product. In the latter case the holder of such a coupon will be able to purchase the selected product at a discount and apply the additional prize to a second product selected once the shopper is in the place of redemption.
[0472] In another use of the invention, a combined method is employed to raise the redemption rate of coupons preprinted in magazines, newspapers, free-standing inserts and the like, hereinafter referred to as preprinted coupons. The following examples illustrate a number of uses of the response unit of the invention in combination with the above mentioned preprinted coupons.
[0473] A hard copy record generated at a shopper's location bears a stipulation to the effect that, upon presentation of a specified or otherwise identified preprinted coupon together with the generated record, the shopper is entitled to an additional prize. The prize may be specified on the generated record, or it may be a “blind prize” which is revealed to the shopper only at the place of redemption of the preprinted coupon. It may also be printed on the coupon contained in the free-standing insert. In another version of the method, the preprinted coupons are provided with an identification, such as an alphanumeric or other code. Coupons dispensed to a prize-winning shopper by his or her response unit also are provided with an alphanumeric or other code. A shopper presenting a preprinted coupon and a prize-winning coupon having matching or correlated codes is entitled to an additional prize, which may be a sweepstake prize. The value of the additional prize if disclosed to such a shopper only at the sales outlet. All of the methods described will raise the redemption rates of coupons.
[0474] If desired the steps of comparing entered responses to the applicable response criteria and of identifying and scoring prize-winning responses can be performed at a central location, in which event shoppers' entered responses are electronically transmitted to a central location, such as by telephone and modem. In such a situation, means for comparing, identifying and scoring are provided at a central location, these means operating in the manner described previously with respect to the response unit at a remote station. Instructional signals governing the generating of a hard copy record are then electronically transmitted to shoppers' locations, at which location said records are generated and dispensed. The instructional signals can be transmitted to shoppers' remote locations in any known manner, such as on an FM-radio frequency, or, in television transmissions through the vertical blanking intervals, through TV-audio or video sub-carrier signals generated by subliminal light impulses.
[0475] In all instances, however, hard copy records are generated and dispensed at shoppers' remote locations.
[0476] According to the present invention, scrambling devices may be provided as part of the response units at shoppers' locations; such scrambling devices of known design are activated and controlled by instructional signals transmitted from a central location. It is the function of said scrambling devices to scramble in random fashion alphanumeric data transmitted, so that when desired, the codes printed or otherwise provided on the hard copy records of a multitude of shoppers randomly differ from each other. In that manner, shoppers in a geographically limited area will receive tokens such as coupons bearing dissimilar or non-identical alphanumeric or other codes. The method of randomly rearranging or disturbing the order of numbers and other symbols transmitted, permits the organizer or sponsor of a broadcast to limit the distribution of prizes to a restricted and somewhat controlled number of television viewers, thus limiting the financial exposure of such sponsor. When broadcasting to a larger audience, the financial exposure of a sponsor can be statistically determined within a narrow range by following the scrambling procedure described.
[0477] The product list may be presented to shoppers at their remote locations by transmitting instructional signals from a central location directing the printers of the response units to print the names or numbers of a plurality of products on the prize coupon generated and dispensed as described. The shopper having received such a coupon displaying a listing of several products then indicates his or her choice of product on the coupon in any convenient manner, such as by checking off, circling, filling in a box, drawing a line, etc. The prize carried by such a coupon is applicable to the earmarked product. Thus the coupon itself serves as a product list limited to products from which a shopper can make a final selection after having entered a sales outlet. Thus a winning TV-viewer can take to a store a discount coupon applicable to a product selected by the shopper at the checkout counter from a list of products. In this fashion, the sponsor has the ability to limit the list of discount products and the shopper can make the final selection.
[0478] According to a preferred method and configuration of the passive terminal, a participant can program a memory in the terminal by entering the names or numbers of one or more products targeted by the participant for early purchase. The potential shopper can then leave the terminal unattended. When the sponsor of a program includes a product so specified by a shopper among those earmarked by the sponsor for discounts or other awards, an alarm in the terminal is activated so as to alert the shopper to this fact. The shopper then has the opportunity to participate in the game and to win a prize token, such as a coupon, carrying a discount on the selected product targeted by the shopper for immediate purchase. It is virtually certain that such a shopper will redeem the coupon thus obtained.
[0479]
[0480] The shopper selects an area of interest at block
[0481] The foregoing description shows the full versatility of the system and methodology of the invention for allowing contestants at remote stations to participate in a game, quiz or other form of show, contest, game of chance, or making predictions of the outcomes of unknown or future events, whether the show be live, prerecorded, or partially prerecorded and partially live.
[0482]
[0483] In the practice of wagering by the invention, a player at a playing station
[0484] Additionally, a video cassette recorder (VCR)
[0485] With reference to FIGS.
[0486] Thus, for example, the program signal transmitted via the communication channel
[0487] As has been described above with reference to
[0488] In accordance with a feature of the invention, protection against a forgery of the card
[0489] In a typical wagering situation, the entering of data by a player (block
[0490] The winning entity includes a reference element against which a player's response can be compared to determine the correctness of the response. The reference element is established, typically, by the host at the central station
[0491] The invention provides for still further evaluation of a player's response in the form of a scoring of the response at block
[0492] With respect to the magnitude of a wager entered by a player, the magnitude may be expressed as a dollar amount or an amount of points, or an amount of gifts to be presented by an advertiser, by way of example. The scoring computer
[0493] The features of the invention, as provided by the system
[0494]
[0495] The amount of money wagered is billed automatically by the telephone facility
[0496] It is an advantage of the present invention that the identity of winning players and the amount won can be announced on television or radio immediately following the drawing of a winning number. The convenience of use of the inventive wagering system contrasts greatly with wagering processes presently available to the general public. At the present time, individuals who wish to participate in a lottery must visit the location of a local lottery agent or retailer to purchase a lottery ticket. Thereafter, a second trip is necessary to collect the winnings at the agent's location. The identities of winners often are not publicly announced immediately following the drawing, and sometimes are delayed for one or more days. Normally, no televised entertainment value is attached to a lottery. These and other drawbacks are overcome by the present invention.
[0497] The response unit
[0498] The card
[0499] If desired, a player may select his or her own lottery number, and to compare a selected number with a winning number printed on the hard-copy record without delay, to enable the player to determine whether a prize has been won. A ticket or card
[0500] If desired, the data facility
[0501] Developments in compression techniques by communications companies make it possible to send vast amounts of data not only over optic fiber cable, but over stranded telephone wires and other non-optic cable. Transmission rates of 64 kilobits-per-second have been announced by AT&T Bell Laboratories for a so-called Integrated Services Digital Network designed for video phones. This technique allows transmission of two high-speed digital channels of data or voice traffic over a single twisted-pair copper phone line. Compression techniques permit sending pictures of video resolution and quality over such telephone wires. This technology makes it possible to conduct complete game shows by telephone provided the home phones are equipped with a screen and a speaker or some other audio means. Thus, a telephone facility which can be a central facility, whether national regional, or local in scale, takes the place of the broadcast stations, i.e. of the network, cable, and radio stations. Telephone subscribers touch or tap a dedicated number to establish contact with the telephone center, requesting a quiz program and authorizing an appropriate debit on their phone bills.
[0502] Using compression techniques and video-equipped phones at such subscribers' homes, a telephone network operator conducts the same kind of quiz described hereinabove. The amount of prizes earned by successful participants is credited to their accounts with the telephone company, a bank, or other institutions. When printers are connected to subscribers' phones, coupons having value or magnetized cards can be generated.
[0503] In another embodiment of the aforesaid TV and radio station network, combined with the telephonic transmission compression techniques, a scenario will be described.
[0504] TV and/or radio stations receive task sets from a central telephone facility. However the stations do not transmit the task selected to their audiences, but transmit both the task and response criteria back to a telephone facility in their market area, where the information is stored in memories at the appropriate hubs. The participating telephone company transmits the task and allows time to its subscribers on its picture phone and upon expiration of the time limit processes only responses received in time from identified subscribers on its hub evaluation equipment.
[0505] This method permits radio stations to participate in the network and the sweepstakes program on the same terms as a TV station, because the video portion as well as the audio portion is sent to subscribers' video phones.
[0506] The names of identified respondent subscribers can be transmitted from each hub to a central storage facility until the sweepstakes drawing takes place at the end of the program. Alternatively, the subscribers' names are temporarily retained in the hub memories and then entered directly in the sweepstakes drawing. Using known technology, names of viewers can be announced and their pictures can be shown at the end of the program that asked the question.
[0507] To ensure additional protection against forgery various identification numbers or other indicia may be imprinted in coded format, or in an invisible format such as by use of magnetic media, or holographic optical recording media, with a copy of the identifying data being stored at the data facility
[0508] In the playing of a lottery game, the player has the option of selecting a winning number or, alternatively, allowing the computer
[0509] The capacity of the system of the invention to create and to dispense wagering tickets with security against cheating is an important object of the invention because this allows players to operate their response units, including the printers, in their homes without danger of someone tampering with a printer to forge a winning ticket. The validating data imprinted on a ticket and the comparison of data with previously stored data in the central data facility enable a foolproof verification of the ticket. By virtue of the invention, the printer cannot be used as a forgery tool. Also, the system meets the objective of providing convenience to players by allowing persons to participate on the spur of the moment in a lottery game or other predictive contest while being debited automatically without leaving their home. The conduction of wagering in conjunction with a task, contest or game of skill rewarded with a prize adds significant entertainment value and possibly instructional value to the wagering experience. Game of lotto and bingo can be accomplished with particular facility by the invention, and the capacity for immediate announcement of winners on television enhances excitement among the participants.
[0510] The systems and the methods of the invention apply to events or games, by chance, such as lotteries, and to events or games covered by knowledge, skill or ability, such as quizzes, tournaments, bouts, contests, and races by humans, machines and animals. It should be understood that a prediction may pertain, for example, to an event of the past, but not known or no longer remembered by a player, so as to constitute a de facto prediction from that player's perspective. An operator or judge of a game of chance or skill determines the rules or conditions that are to be met to qualify for a prize. For example, in a form of betting known as “off track” betting on a horse race, there are odds governing payoffs to winners. The odds are determined at a central location and are reflected in the winning wager information transmitted from the central location to the remote playing stations for imprinting on the players' tickets.
[0511] In the practice of the invention for wagering, the terms “operator” or “organizer” of a game of chance or skill are intended to include all individuals in charge of such gaming activities or in any kind of decision-making capacity, including judges, referees, handicappers, umpires, racing committees and other officials. The terms “forgery-resisting”. and “tamper-proof” are intended to include prevention and alteration, as well as the preventing of tampering with an object of the forgery, typically a lottery ticket, and also includes making inaccessible and preventing electronic access to the object of forgery. The terms “fee” or “charge” are intended to include the meaning of debit, cost, or price charged to participants in a wagering situation. The terms “wagering”, “betting” or “gaming” are intended to include the meaning of players' predictions of, or bets and wagers on, the total, final, midstream, or partial outcome of a game of skill, such as a golf tournament, and includes also the wager amount. The term “ticket” is intended to include the meaning of vouchers, coupons, certificates and other hard copy records.
[0512] The term “presentation” of a wagering situation or scenario is intended to include a presentation over TV, radio, and/or the telephone. The term “authentication” is intended to include processes of validation, verification, confirmation and acceptance of a winning ticket. The term “matching” as in “matching numbers” is intended to include any predetermined relationship between a player's entered data and the determined reference element, and between selected and winning numbers, such as a mathematical, partial, or zero relationship. The term “forgery-resistant data storage facility” is intended to include any facility in which stored data are protected against tampering, are inaccessible, or beyond the reach or influence of would-be forgers. If a wager is offered by an operator and such wager carries only a single type of fixed award, for example, or if only one wager amount is offered, then the term “wager amount determined by a player” is intended to include the acceptance of such fixed wager.
[0513] The term “game show” is intended to include the meaning of one or more questions, quizzes, predictions and solicitations to perform a task. The term “response” is intended to include the meaning of an answer and of a prediction. The term “scenario” is intended to include the meaning of a presentation, definition, view or description of an event or a situation. The term “entered wager” pertains to data entered by a player prior to the determination of the data constituting a winning wager. The term “winning wager” pertains to an entered wager having a determined correlation to a reference element. The term “reference element” pertains to data, such as a number, by which an entered wager is judged in order to determine whether the entered wager is a winning wager. The term “reference element” is intended to include measurements and expressions of evaluation, such as points scored, time consumed, judged performance, achieved ratings and standings of participants and players/contestants.
[0514] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the operators of a game of chance decide on a formula by which prizes may be won by players whose selected indicia do not completely match a winning indicia. Rewards may be granted to players whose selected number or indicia come closest to the winning indicia. Players may enter selected indicia up to a cutoff point in time determined by a game operator; also, means may be provided for modifying a selected wager prior to the cutoff point. By way of example, if a winning indicia is the number
[0515] As has been described above, a number or indicium may be selected by a player or may be established by random selection. The number assigned to a player is communicated to the central data storage facility prior to a drawing of the winning number.
[0516] By way of further example in the use of the invention, a question may be posed in a TV show, the question asking the years in which World War I began and ended. A time limit for answering and a prize also are announced. A winning player would enter the years 1914-1918 in the response unit. The response unit prints out a ticket stating the players' entered information and identification. The response unit also transmits the same information via a modem and a telephone line to the central data storage facility.
[0517] When or after the host of the TV-show has announced the correct answer on the air, the signals conveying the correct answer and prize information are transmitted from the location of the TV-show to players' remote response units. The response units print the winning information on all players' tickets for comparison purposes. Winning tickets on which a player's entered information matches the winning information may be presented by the ticket holders at an appropriate location for redemption or playoff. As described above, the agent at the location can verify the authenticity of the ticket by communicating with the data storage facility and obtaining confirmation. In the case of a ticket formed as a magnetic card, the magnetic card can be validated by passing it through a well-known scanner connected to the data storage facility, the scanner reading the data recorded on the card for transmission to the data facility whereupon the data facility transmits back a signal acknowledging verification or denying verification.
[0518] In some instances, the conditions under which a lottery is conducted are similar in many respects to those of sweepstakes and other games. The present invention therefore is intended to be applicable to any game, contest or wagering based on knowledge, skill, or chance, in which it is important to prevent tampering with or forging of hard copy records by interested parties. While it may not be necessary to employ all the safeguards described herein in connection with every wager, the operator of the wager game has the option of employing the security measures disclosed herein. For example, in the case of wagering situations for which prizes of high value may be awarded, there may be further storage of a player's data indicia, number or symbols in an accessible location to facilitate secure redemption of a ticket. In the event that a player's betting exceeds acceptable monetary limits, the automatic billing via the telephone system, as disclosed hereinabove, may limit the amount of betting and disclose to the central data facility and to the response unit a rejection or limitation of bets exceeding a previously established limit. When required, players are notified and are asked to communicate their wager information to a designated location for storage and comparison purposes. Such a notice to players makes it clear that tampering with a player's home response unit is useless. Thus, players are dissuaded from attempting forgery or other form of falsification.
[0519] Security is enhanced further by providing the response unit with a registration or serial number by which each response unit is registered in the name of its owner. Hard-copy records dispensed by the response unit may bear the same serial number, if desired, to enable tracing of a hard-copy record to the specific response unit which generated the record. This security is in addition to that provided by the PIN number described above by which a player gains access to the telephone system. Normally, in a wagering situation, a time limit is established electronically for the entering of wagers at the keyboard of each response unit such that a late entry, made after the time limit becomes effective, are not stored at the central data facility, and are not printed on the player's ticket, this precluding the player from winning a prize for a late entry of wager.
[0520] In the printing and dispensing of hard-copy records by a response unit, it is noted that the records may have a variety of forms which facilitate different manners of utilizing the hard-copy record. For example, in the event that a ticket is employed wherein the winning number and a player's entry are printed, the player has the opportunity to check as to whether he has won, or to the extent in which he has won in the event that various levels of winning are present. In the event that a magnetic card is employed as the hard-copy record, the card can be utilized in connection with automatic electronic debiting of a player by the amount of the wager, and with an automatic electronic crediting of winnings to a player's account. Equipment, such as automatic banking machines employing card readers, are already available for cooperation with the inventive system for providing these functions of crediting and debiting. Bar codes and bar code readers may also be employed in which case the bar code is imprinted on a ticket along with data imprinted with alphanumeric characters to be readable by a player.
[0521] As has been described above in the operation of a response unit, the invention enables participants in the remote audience to designate areas of interest. This is particularly important with respect to an award received by individual ones of the participants, such that the award is related directly to a participant's area of interest. Thus, in the case of a game show wherein advertisers' products are displayed in various areas of interest, a participant of the remote audience can select a product area of interest and, subsequently, receive an award in the form of a coupon allowing him to purchase a product in the area of interest. This greatly increases a participant's interest in the game show. This feature also increases greatly the chance that a participant will employ his coupon, as by visiting the store of an advertiser to redeem the coupon. Also, in a quiz program, a contestant is given the opportunity to select an area of interest from alternative areas of interest in which the contestant is believed to have a special knowledge area. Prize coupons may be available to winning contestants entitling the player to a discount on merchandise promoted by a sponsor. However, in the event of a discount coupon issued for a product that is not in demand, the unwanted product, most likely, would not be redeemed. However, unlike merchandising systems of the past where coupons have been issued in areas of little interest with consequential low rates of redemption, in the case of the present invention a high rate of redemption is anticipated because of the capability afforded to participants to select areas of interest, both with respect to manufacturers' or retailers' products as well of areas of interest in terms of a participants' knowledge.
[0522] In view of the use of the telephone system for communication of data between a response unit and the central data facility, it is possible also to employ the telephone system to substitute for communication via the television and/or radio in areas wherein television and/or radio reception are not available to a participant. Thus, by way of example, the progress of a contest can be reported via telephone to a participant. Also, if desired, such progress can be reported by a telephone to supplement data received via television and/or radio broadcast.
[0523] If desired, the central data facility or the telephone system may store financial information regarding individuals who are subscribers to a wagering service provided by the invention. The financial information may be updated periodically or when desirable, for instance each time a subscriber pays a bill or commits a sum to a wager. This enables the telephone or other service facility to check the financial standing or credit status of each player in the context of the wager a player wishes to make.
[0524] In accordance with a further aspect of the invention, it is noted that the concept of playing a game by responding to stimuli, such as a scenario presented by television, by radio or by telephonic communication, can be extended over a period of days, weeks, or even months. Scenarios may be authorized such as in the case of dramatic or prearranged scenarios. Over such an extended interval of time, a respondent might make entries via the keyboard of the response unit
[0525] The extended shopping interval proceeds as follows. A list of items obtainable by purchase at a local market is set forth in a listing contained, by way of example, in a newspaper, in a mailing to householders, or on the television screen
[0526] The respondent employs the keyboard to enter into a memory of the response unit the identifying numbers of those items for which there is an interest in a future purchase at a sale or discounted price. From time to time over the ensuing days, weeks, or even months, the instructional signal transmits to the response unit an updated listing of the items of merchandise including data of items put on sale or on discount by the manufacturer or retailer. This effectively flags those items which are on sale or available at discount. The computer
[0527] Furthermore, with respect to the wagering aspect of the invention, the respondent, or player, can wager on which item or items may go on sale or be discounted. The selected items serve as the subject of a bet in the same fashion as presented in the foregoing description of the wagering.
[0528] The foregoing description has demonstrated that the various configurations of central station and remote station can be employed additionally in the conduction of a wagering situation, either by itself as in a game of lotto, or in conjunction with an educational program, a sporting event, or a program directed specifically to products of interest to an advertiser, by way of example.
[0529] FIGS.
[0530] The individual network programs are transmitted one after the other from the base station in a sequence continuing, if desired, throughout the day. Each of the network programs occupy a predetermined time slot within a program sequence wherein the times of occurrence of the various network programs as well as, possibly, the contents of the network programs, have been made known previously to the managers or hosts of the various central stations of the network.
[0531] The invention provides that each central station is free to select specific ones of the network programs for rebroadcast in accordance with the program scheduling of the central station. This provides freedom for the host of the central station to employ network program material which may be live or previously prepared. In the case of live network program material, the network program material may be prepared with the aid of a program host in a studio at the base station, which studio may be constructed as disclosed above with reference to
[0532] A great advantage of the invention is that the use of the network program material interspersed among local programming material allows people across the country to participate in a common contest, or a common learning experience, or in a common national survey, by way of example. The use of predesignated time slots allows the central stations to insert the network programs within the regular broadcasting schedules of the respective central stations in a manner similar to that of the usual interruption of a broadcast program for a message from an advertiser or sponsor. Thereby, the invention allows for the participation of people from across the country to be accomplished without need for any significant rescheduling of local programming.
[0533] Many people in the broadcast audience can participate by responding to tasks or questions set forth in the network program. For example, it is anticipated that there will be many responses occurring during a relatively short interval of time following a broadcast of the network material nationally, such as a nationally broadcast contest wherein individual responses by participants, whether simultaneous or staggered, might be based on chance, skill, or prior knowledge. The nature of the response would depend on the nature of the task presented. To facilitate entry of the large number of responses, as well as to evaluate and authenticate the responses, the invention employs an electronic hub which is operated in conjunction with each central station. As will be described, the hub may include equipment such as the telephone switchboard of
[0534] Before continuing with a description of the benefits of the inventive feature of the networking of plural central stations, it is advantageous to describe the details in the construction and the practice of this feature of the invention.
[0535]
[0536] The switch
[0537] In
[0538] The base station
[0539] In the conduction of a program, via the base station
[0540]
[0541]
[0542]
[0543]
[0544] In operation, each playback unit
[0545] FIGS.
[0546] By way of alternative embodiments, it is noted that a hub
[0547]
[0548]
[0549]
[0550] The use of the telecommunications network
[0551] The telecommunications network
[0552] The telecommunications network
[0553] The equipment of the base station
[0554] In the use of the communication system
[0555] During the transmission of the tasks via the satellite or the optical link or the microwave link, or the cable, the response criteria may be transmitted via a telephone line in view of the much lower bandwidth of the signal carrying the response criteria. In the case of a radio transmission from the station
[0556] If it is desired to send the task television program as a sequence of frames at a relatively slow rate, possibly as cartoons in which there is little change in the amount of data from frame to frame, data compression techniques may be employed to send digitized versions of the subject matter from the base station via telephone lines of the communication system
[0557] By use of data compression techniques a television screen of the receiving stations of
[0558] All necessary data for connection of the quiz program or sweepstakes is stored within the storage unit
[0559] The system and method of the invention lend themselves well to conducting polls, surveys, and other studies in which large population samples are preferred in order to obtain more reliable results than those obtained from small samples. this produces polling results that reduce the statistical margin of error to a negligible quantity because the audiences polled approximate in size a large fraction of the population being sampled.
[0560] The telephone link
[0561] The term “polling” is intended to include the meanings of all forms of soliciting opinions, responses, estimates, and other types of information that have useful applications in such areas as surveys, market analyses, studies of demographics and psychographics, comparisons, contests, sampling and public opinion polls.
[0562] The term “selecting”, such as in selecting a task, is intended to include the meaning of selecting or clearing a task for broadcasting, even if there is only one task available at the time.
[0563] The term “score” is intended to include the meaning of computing or assigning a value to or an award for an acceptable response, including a single fixed value or award for all acceptable responses.
[0564] The term “printer” or “printed” is intended to include all types of hard record generating devices, such as teletype and other printers, facsimile machines, and all methods for generating such records such as the faxing of documents.
[0565] The term “task” is intended to include the meanings of question(s), a request for a statement or response, elicitation of an opinion or judgment, an educational fact, an invitation to make a prediction, or an extending of an opportunity to go on record with a expression in response to an inquiry.
[0566] The term “hub” is intended to include the meanings of any location having means for providing a common storage, an evaluation, an accepting, a rejecting, or having a scoring or processing facility for handling a plurality of data sets.
[0567] The term “identification” is intended to include any data and information through which the identity of a respondent can be traced or established, including a respondent's entering means or response unit.
[0568] The term “audience” is intended to include any individuals receiving a task, such as TV viewers, radio listeners, telephone subscribers, and single or pluralities of individuals at remote locations or gathered in hotels, casinos, bars, auditoriums, and other public and private places.
[0569] The term “central” as in a central station or location is intended to refer to a signal transmission or processing facility serving or being shared by a plurality of other stations. Similarly, the term “central location” or “central facility” refers to any location or facility performing functions for or serving a plurality of recipients or receiving stations.
[0570] The term “program structure” is intended to refer to the chronological sequence, scheduling and timing of program portions, such as entertainment segments, commercials, newsbreaks, and station identifications, by way of example.
[0571] The term “broadcasting” is intended to include the transmission and the propagation of signals in any form over the air by wire or cable, including telephone wires and optic fiber cable, and by television, radio, and telephone.
[0572] The term “answer” in response to a task is intended to include the meaning of answers, responses, selections (e.g. true or false) and confirmations (e.g. do you agree that . . . ).
[0573] The term “800-number” refers to a dedicated telephone number called by a subscriber without cost to the subscriber. The term “900-number” refers to a dedicated telephone number called at the subscriber's expense.
[0574] The term “transmitter” or “transmitting” are intended to include means for, or the act of, transmitting through broadcasting or narrowcasting electronic, magnetic, audible, and visual signals by cable, telephone wire or over the air.
[0575] The term “sweepstakes” is intended to include the awarding of prizes of any value in which the determination of one or more winners is by a random or other predetermined process. The term “prize event” is intended to include any kind of event in which a participant, through skill or by chance, including random determination, can win a prize having value.
[0576] Tasks or task sets can be communicated, transmitted, delivered, provided or conveyed to stations in different ways including transmissions over the air or by cable, and mechanical or physical delivery in the form of recordings such as tapes or writings.
[0577] The term “station” is intended to include facilities for sending or receiving television, radio and telephone signals.
[0578] The term “prize event” is defined as an event in which one or more winners are determined either randomly or through skill. As an example, participation in a survey or poll can be encouraged by allowing respondents to enter or be entered in a sweepstakes or in a contest in which winners are determined by skill or knowledge.
[0579] The term “response” is intended to include answers to questions and predictions of the outcome of events.
[0580] The term “portion”, as in program portion, is intended to include the meanings of taped footage, segment, episode, scene, or other parts of a program.
[0581] The term “network”, as in network of stations, is intended to refer to a loose grouping of stations, in which the stations do not necessarily cooperate with each other or coordinate their broadcast and program content, but in which stations participate in order to benefit from the combined audience drawing power of an event such as a sweepstakes.
[0582] The provision of a network for linking together the numerous central stations, in accordance with the invention, makes possible the generation of an enlarged broadcast audience and, furthermore, enables the leveraging of advertising potential of possibly hundreds of broadcast stations so as to fund large sweepstakes events in which attractive prizes are offered to members of the audience. While, in the past, networking has enabled television and radio stations to share a common program content as by broadcasting the same entertainment or other common program, the invention provides for a further common denominator of the station network in the nature of an event such as a sweepstakes.
[0583] The major thrust of the concept underlying the systems and methods of the invention is to weld the audiences of hundreds of television and radio stations broadcasting their regularly scheduled programs into a single advertising market. The combining of the audiences occurs during the span of a broadcast program such as a thirty minute or a sixty minute program, as the numerous television and radio station broadcast their regularly scheduled programs. This advertising market is formed by the broadcast stations participating in a network created for this purpose. The ad hoc network concept is based on the rationale that very large television and radio audiences, possibly in the tens of millions of persons, can be attracted by combining broadcast entertainment with quiz opportunities to win sweepstake prizes. The sweepstake prizes would be unusually large, and the sweepstakes would offer the participants odds that are significantly more favorable than those of, for example, state lotteries. Furthermore, if desired, the sweepstakes can offer all viewers and listeners opportunities to win discount coupons, cash vouchers, and other prizes as has been disclosed hereinabove with reference to
[0584] While there are similarities in the construction and the operation of the systems of
[0585] The network organizers, by way of example, may sign an ad hoc network agreement with 500-1000 mixed television and radio stations. Such an arrangement may be loose in nature, permitting program by program participation by individual stations at their own discretion. Stations can decide at any time to join the network as part of the first signal delivery system. Normally, the organizers of the network would sign telephone companies to the agreement. In addition to providing a communications link, the telephone companies would also employ the aforementioned response evaluation equipment.
[0586] The television stations (both network and cable stations) and radio stations each transmit their regularly scheduled programs. Most of the programs are expected to be disparate. Program contents need not be changed. Presently, most programs are routinely interrupted to allow for the broadcast of material such as commercials and station identification, such interruptions being timed, preferably, to fit each stations schedule. This prevents all of the stations from airing a quiz at the same time.
[0587] The programs broadcast by TV and radio stations may differ from each other in a number of ways. The program content, the number of program segments, the duration of program segments, the timing of commercial and other messages and other chronological features may vary from station to station. It is an important characteristic of the invention that every station participating in the ad hoc network can design and structure its program independently of that of the other stations. A participating station can broadcast or retransmit a task, such as a question, at the particular point in time when a task insertion is harmonious with the broadcast program, without conflicting with the station's normally scheduled program structure. When practical and desired, two or more tasks can be fitted into a station's program.
[0588] Taking advantage of the ad hoc nature of the network of the invention, a station can join a network prize program without giving advance notice. The station can subsequently account to operators of the network for advertising revenue in accordance with the terms of the network agreement. As an example, the station can pay a share of its increased advertising revenue to a prize fund administered by the operators of the network. Other arrangements, such as a flat fee or a per task charge can be agreed upon.
[0589] The quiz portion of the broadcast is carried by the second delivery system which may be operationally independent of the first program delivery system. The second delivery system can combine over-the-air and cable transmissions. The second delivery system can transmit sequentially a plurality of tasks, such as questions, as has been disclosed above with reference to
[0590] Audiences of participating television and radio stations are able to respond to a quiz in their homes, hotels, bars, and other places by use of standard preexistent telephone equipment. As noted above, the practice of the invention is facilitated by enabling a participant to respond by simply dialing a dedicated telephone number followed by the use of specific keys of the telephone keypad to enter a chosen response . As may be determined by sponsors of the quiz program, the dedicated number to be called by a participant may be an 800 number or a 900 number. Also, as has been disclosed hereinabove with reference to
[0591] Accordingly, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, at one or more telephone hubs, programmable evaluation devices are provided, such as the aforementioned response evaluation unit
[0592] Tasks transmitted by the second delivery system to participating stations such as the central stations
[0593] This enables a broadcast station to pick up and retransmit as part of its program a task set at the precise time it fits into the schedule of the particular station, and without interfering with the chronological structure of its scheduled program. Each participating television or radio station determines when to insert a task set for its own program. If, for example, a sweepstake program of the network is aired between 8:00 PM and 9:00 PM, an individual station may decide to pick up tasks following, or in the place of, two of its commercials, which are scheduled at 8:15 and 8:45, by way of example. Following each of the sixty second commercials, the participating station retransmits the tasks received at 8:16 and 8:46 PM. The content and the structure of its regularly scheduled program remains unchanged. The task sets broadcast via the satellite
[0594] Acceptable responses qualify contestants for automatic and cost-free entry into the sweepstakes. Using ANI (automatic number identification), as may be provided by the facility
[0595] The telephone facilities are used effectively, and without overloading, in spite of the large audience which may respond o questions . First, it is noted that television and radio stations normally broadcast questions spread over the duration of their respective programs, possibly over a sixty minute interval. Respondents throughout the network
[0596] A participant in a game can be informed of the acceptance of a response by the transmission of a message to the participant automatically from a hub
[0597] In the operation of the central stations
[0598] It is advantageous to employ the automatic number identification facility
[0599] If desired, relatively complex questions may be employed, and the response evaluation equipment scores the answers with a score commensurate with the degree or skill of knowledge displayed in the response as has been described hereinabove with reference to the systems of
[0600] The network
[0601] In the case of national advertisers, a trivia question may relate to the advertiser, to a product, or may constitute institutional advertising. Such a question is in effect a commercial to which audiences respond as described hereinabove.
[0602] By way of example in the practice of the invention, on occasions, it may be desirable for all participating central stations
[0603] For example, the program of a participating broadcast station is divided into two or more segments. The segments are chronologically separated and a time gap, for example, of thirty to sixty seconds, depending on the question, is created between segments. Task sets are transmitted and answers by contestants are entered and evaluated as heretofore described.
[0604] Alternatively, each viewer or listener is provided with a response unit, for instance, at home. The response units may be programmed via satellite signals which convey response criteria including acceptable answers and scoring instructions. Acceptable answers are instantly rewarded, commensurate with knowledge displayed by respondents, by monetary coupons printed by the response unit in each home.
[0605] Awards can be in the form of numbered and/or coded coupons carrying a discount on products promoted by an advertiser. The numbering, coding, or bar-coding of coupons makes it possible to trace coupons to the response unit that has printed the coupon, and through the registered response unit to the individual owner or respondent using it. In a coast-to-coast broadcast sponsored by several national advertisers, a number of sweepstakes prizes are interspersed among the discount or smaller cash prizes awarded to successful audience members. Depending on the number of participating stations and advertisers, sweepstakes prizes can be very large and can far exceed prizes normally offered participants in game shows. The prospect of extraordinarily large prizes will attract viewers and listeners to any program at any time. Any of numerous program materials may be selected, and all of the programs can differ in content, if desired.
[0606] Furthermore, broadcast stations may interrupt their programs at the same time to provide time for the insertion of a network quiz. Broadcast station programs may vary, but within the constraint of synchronization of the time gaps between segments of the programs of the respective broadcast stations. Also, as noted hereinabove with respect to the storage unit
[0607] As a further illustration in the practice of the invention, hundreds of broadcast stations broadcast different television and radio programs, and the communication system
[0608] If desired, various ones of the central stations
[0609] For example, a network operator organizes a conglomeration of 500 television and 500 radio stations coast-to-coast for a specific time slot, for example, 11:00 to 11:00 AM Eastern time. Individual stations and TV networks can sign on until the time of the broadcast, or can simply provide an accounting regarding its revenues or the usage of the network. Each broadcast station airs the show as scheduled, without coordination or consultation with other ones of the broadcast stations. Theoretically, 1000 totally different programs can be aired. There is a requirement that all of the shows be interrupted, for instance, from 11:10 to 11:11 AM and from 11:20 to 11:21 AM, this being two interruptions each of which lasts for one minute. Each time gap in this example includes time for a 30 second commercial, as well as for a 30 second task set, wherein a task set includes a question and time allowed for an answer plus one or more acceptable answers and instructions for scoring the answers. The commercial by a national advertiser can serve as a vehicle for a question. The questions may require a multiple choice answer, with each answer being numbered so that a participant need only touch a numbered button on a telephone or other response device.
[0610] Before and during the show, the audience is informed that all acceptable responses will be rewarded with a coupon carrying a certain discount on the advertised other products and that, in addition, there will be awarded a prize to each of five sweepstakes winners. Questions can be deliberately easy to answer, or if so determined by its sponsor, can offer respondents the opportunity to enter more comprehensive or superior answers, for instance, in response to open-ended questions. When respondents are appropriately equipped with response units
[0611] To attract numbers of shoppers to stores, a percentage of the coupons dispensed can be “blind coupons” that carry an extra prize, ascertainable only upon redemption of stores, if the numbered coupons match the “lucky number” of the day in the store. Coupons can have advertising and promotional messages printed on them in accordance with programming signals received by the response units from a central location. Advertisers can change the text of such coast-to-coast messages on very short notice.
[0612] The versatility and the flexibility of the system enables participating advertisers and broadcast stations to bolster the ratings of any show at any time of the day or night. A participant who has entered an acceptable answer can be rewarded with a prize having symbolic or monetary value. An example of an award having symbolic value would be a ranking or standing of the participant in a national contest in which responses are scored, and the scores compared and ranked at a hub. Responses with superior scores can be further evaluated, screened and reduced in number so as to reduce the number of remaining participants who have entered acceptable responses to the number determined by the game operators. The aforementioned telephone links permit a downloading of evaluated response data to a further central storage and evaluation facility where accepted and scored responses are further compared and rank-ordered. Final standings can include 5, 10, 50 or other number of remaining players. One or more of those players can be rewarded with prizes, ranging from sweepstake prizes to cash, discounts and other prizes. If desired, the communication system
[0613] According to a preferred method, acceptable responses are scored and the scored responses, which are identified with respondents, are entered in sweepstakes. The entered responses have their scored results associated with them, the scores being used for weighing the responses. The weights are then attached in order to skew the statistical probabilities of randomly determining one or more winners of the sweepstakes.
[0614] Thus, while all entered responses have a chance of winning a sweepstakes prize, entered responses with superior scores are weighted so as to increase the probability of winning. As an example, acceptable responses are awarded point scores, ranging from ten points for a response meeting minimum response criteria to fifty points for perfect responses. The responses are entered in a sweepstakes in which winners are randomly determined within determined parameters.
[0615] Such parameters can be one or a range of percentages or of a respondent emerging as a probabilities winner from among entered respondents. The electronic mechanisms for selecting winners are similar to those of electronically programmable slot machines used in casinos. In such machines the chances of winning can be adjusted, ranging, for instance, for a minimum prize from 5-10%. Applying similar principles to the system of the present invention, the probability of a response with a 10 point score winning a prize can be adjusted to be one fifth the probability of a response with a perfect 50 point score.
[0616] In addition to the frequency of winners within a point score range, the size of prizes within the point score range can also be adjusted.
[0617] In some instances, the network organizer may want to enter successful respondents in a preliminary qualifying or elimination event. Participants in a preliminary event, who have acceptably answered a question posed by the station to which they are listening or which they are viewing, are automatically, or are entitled to be, entered in a secondary or a final event. The preliminary event can be a contest of skill or a randomly decoded event. A successful respondent's reward can be the automatic entry in one or more secondary contests offering prizes to winners. In this manner, the number of entries can be significantly reduced and can be controlled at will by regulating the level of difficulty of the tasks of the preliminary or qualifying contest, i.e. the tasks disseminated by stations. Successful respondents can be entered in the “semifinals” or “finals” of a secondary event.
[0618] When desired, tasks, including questions, can allow for responses including answers at two or more levels of difficulty, and responses are scored in accordance with the degree of difficulty of the response. Acceptable responses at the lowest level of difficulty can be rewarded with one entry into a sweepstakes, whereas responses scored higher due to a response at a higher level of difficulty, are rewarded with two or more entries in the sweepstakes in the name of the successful respondent.
[0619] A plurality of regional sweepstakes of the kinds described can be conducted and winners of each of the sweepstakes are determined. Every winner of a regional sweepstakes can be rewarded with a prize, as well as with one or more entries in a “final” “ultimate” or “grand” sweepstakes.
[0620] The determination at evaluation hubs whether or not a response is an acceptable response is normally made in a short period of time, which permits notifying a respondent of the evaluation result via a recorded message in the course of the initial call made by the respondent to transmit a response to the central evaluation facility. For instance, a “yes” or “no” response, or the answer to a multiple-choice question, can be evaluated in milliseconds by devices in employing well-known electronic components. A caller of a dedicated number can therefore be informed very quickly whether he or she has been entered into a prize event. This capability is important in order to limit calls to less than one minute.
[0621] According to the preferred embodiment of the methods described, evaluation hubs are formed into regional or local hub group, e.g. hubs connected to a local telephone company or to one of the Regional Bell Operating Companies. A separate game show, or a similar event, or another form of contest, is held for individuals in the area, and winning respondents are entered in a regionally limited sweepstakes. The intention is that regional winners, who win prizes, are entered in a similar event comprising a larger territory, or even a national sweepstakes in which the winner of the grand prize is determined. By organizing “preliminaries” or elimination events, increasing interest and suspense are generated. As an example, daily regional contests are conducted in different parts of the country during weekdays. Winners of the regional contests or sweepstakes, who receive prizes, are entered in the ultimate Saturday finale or “Sweepstakes Hour”. Regional contests may extend to and include foreign regions, provinces, or countries, permitting regional game shows to be conducted in different languages.
[0622] The method described has the advantage of making it possible to announce a larger number of winners on the air than would be practical in the case of a single contest. The term “regional” is intended to include the meanings of local, country-wide, state-wide or other territorially limited area served by one or more hubs of telephone companies or of other evaluation facilities capable of the functions described.
[0623] An example of an economical procedure for preparing a large number of tasks for use in an internationally conducted game will now be described. A well known person, such as a movie star, acting as the host, asks several questions which are self-explanatory, so as to be intelligible to radio listeners without benefit of a video presentation. The video presentation can be added for members of the audience having television equipment. The question can be asked in one language in its original taping, and can be translated into any desired number of languages for dubbing in the foreign radio or TV version of the question. Such taping of questions for presentation to radio listeners and TV viewers will be very inexpensive. It is noted that the audience is tuned into the radio or TV station broadcasting the program preferred by the listener or viewer, irrespective of the sweepstakes event. Conversely, this means that the quality of the quiz is not necessarily the decisive feature attracting the audience, but simply is a vehicle for giving audience members the sweepstakes opportunity to win large prizes.
[0624] Unauthorized use of the methods of the invention is prevented by coding or scrambling at least a part of the tasks transmitted to and retransmitted by a broadcast station or transmitted to respondents' locations. Such scrambling is well known and is often incorporated presently in programs transmitted via satellite. Intelligible task sets will only be received by stations and respondents having decoding or unscrambling equipment.
[0625] Normally, a question is accompanied by a time limit for responding. Provisions can be made to prevent entering more than one answer to a question within the time limit allowed for responding as has been described hereinabove with reference to the operation of the response unit
[0626] Forging of a sweepstakes prize is prevented in the use of the network
[0627] The invention may be practiced with known techniques for number or caller identification which make it possible to identify every respondent in a poll, thereby to generate market data not obtainable heretofore. Using the technique in the context of market analysis and to elicit consumer reaction to products, the resulting single source marketing data base that can be created provides important information and leads for the purpose of advertising, promotions, and direct mailings.
[0628] Further, in the practice of the invention by use of prerecorded tasks at the base station
[0629] For use of the invention with multi-lingual audiences, questions broadcast over television can be in the form of pictures, cartoons, animations, or graphics which are understandable by people speaking different languages simply by visual interpretation. An accompanying audio portion is selected for its universal comprehension by people speaking different languages as in the use of the word “no”.
[0630] It is noted also that the function of the communication system
[0631] If desired, in the communication of a respondent's response from a remote station
[0632] Thereby, every audience member, from viewers of an urban television station to listeners of a small-town radio station enjoy virtually effortless participation in a sweepstakes and an equal chance of winning the sweepstakes prize.
[0633] A number of polling systems of the invention will now be described. The objectives of the polls can include a tabulation of responses or “votes” on a national or other scale, the responses including a confirmation (e.g. “do you agree that . . . ?”), choice between two options (e.g. “which of the following two choices do you favor?”) or a multiple choice selection (e.g. “indicate your preferred “alternative”).
[0634] It also is an objective to screen out or reject responses that are not responsive in the sense of not addressing the issue, being mutilated or unacceptable for other reasons. To eliminate non-responsive votes, the organizers of the poll formulate response criteria defining the parameters or basic rules to which a response has to conform to be validated, i.e. to be counted. The validation of a response or vote therefore is a first step in its processing or evaluation. Once validated, the accepted votes are stored and then are tabulated, analyzed or otherwise processed in accordance with known procedures.
[0635] Responses can be tabulated on any desired scale, including local, regional, national or other scale. When desirable, votes are recorded, stored, or even processed on a limited geographic scale and are then communicated to a larger, more central, or a national facility for further processing and tabulation. Votes can be partially processed or evaluated on a local or regional scale and can be further analyzed upon collection at a national processing or tabulating facility.
[0636] It is obvious that responses have to meet certain basic and varying requirements to be tabulated or otherwise processed. For instance, if an answer does not address the question, if an answer is incomplete or entered too late, etc., such an answer is not validated i.e. it is not accepted for processing. The said validation of responses is governed by response criteria defining the requirements to be met by a response.
[0637] To induce the public to respond to a poll, the incentive of informing respondents of the outcome of the poll can be provided. Such informing can be done through the mail or one of the mass communications media.
[0638] It is understood that every response undergoes two processing steps, the first being a validation step and the second being a processing step. Unvalidated, i.e. rejected responses are excluded from tabulation. Validated responses are processed in accordance with instructions formulated by the poll operator. Results of tabulation are made available to respondents, but are normally limited to providers of a validated response.
[0639] The versatility of the system and methods of the invention are illustrated by the following example. A regional charitable organization, having used the survey technique described, has tabulated identified respondents in its area of activities who in the survey have “strongly endorsed” the goals of the charitable organization. This tabulation enables the organization to follow up and contact these individual families identified in the tabulation by telephone, mail, or through personal visits.
[0640] To minimize polling costs related to telephone charges, whether incurred by calling 800 or 900 numbers, a subject or issues to be voted on are discussed, for example, in the course of a 30 minute TV program. During the first 25 minutes, no votes are taken, but the audience is alerted to the questions that will be asked at the end of e debate. During the last five minutes of the program, during which a voter is connected to a local hub by telephone or other cable, or to a radio hub, a number of predetermined questions are asked. For instance, 10 votes are elicited and 30 seconds are allocated to each question. of those 30 seconds, 20 seconds are devoted to a summary of an issue and 10 seconds are allowed for the entry of a multiple-choice answer, such as touching buttons to enter two digits on a telephone keypad.
[0641] It is another objective to identify and record the identities of the respondents or “voters”. According to a preferred embodiment, votes are cast by telephone, although other two-way communication can be used. A voter dials a dedicated number and enters additional digits indicating the voter's response. The votes of telephone subscribers are recorded and tabulated as described. At the same time, using caller identification CI automated number identification (ANI), or similar techniques, the identities of all voters are captured and stored. The stored data can include not only the respondent's identity, but the vote itself and other comments.
[0642] Votes can be tabulated on the basis of the nature of votes cast, so that for instance all telephone subscribers living in one congressional district who have cast identical votes, can be identified and grouped. Desired identified voters can then be contacted at an appropriate time. Other records can be tabulated on the basis of predetermined characteristics or correlations of cast votes. A correlation could be, for example, that of votes tending to favor one political trend over another, as would be the case of voters “agreeing strongly” or “agreeing somewhat” with a proposition when confronted with four or five choices of a multiple choice question. These types of tabulation can be generated for any chosen delimited area defined by topographical or political boundaries, demographics, or other characteristics.
[0643]
[0644] Alternatively, evaluation of a response of the respondent
[0645] The central evaluation facility
[0646] The communication mode
[0647] With respect to the various embodiments presented by the system
[0648] By way of further option, the processing of a response can be shared between the remote response unit
[0649] It is noted that the mode
[0650] Also included in the mode
[0651] The foregoing functions of the system
[0652] Thereby, the generalized system
[0653] With reference to
[0654] The telephone
[0655] In operation, the switch button
[0656] Other ones of the keys
[0657] Thereby, the keyboard
[0658] In the operation of the telephone
[0659] Instructional signals for operation of the response circuitry of the telephone
[0660] When desired, a memory (not shown) connected to credit point storage
[0661] By way of further embodiments, it is noted that it may be desired to operate the telephone only in an all digital system wherein instructional signals are to be encoded digitally, as are facsimile signals, employing the full frequency spectrum of the telephone line, rather than the limited spectrum disclosed in
[0662] In view of the capacity of the telephone
[0663] The system of
[0664] In the case of program material producing a scenario such as a world series baseball game wherein a task requires the prediction of the next play, it is understood that the game may be either a live game, or may be a game of historical interest which may have been played more than 10 years earlier. In either case, the consideration of an event to be predicted applies equally well to both the live and the prerecorded presentations.
[0665] With respect to the use of the central evaluation facility
[0666] In another form of implementing the method for rewarding successful contestants, a marketing facility such as a catalog center, a showroom, a discount center, or a redemption center carries or opens monetary accounts in the names of individual contestants. A contestant can spend part or all of his or her credit limit, or of the amounts accumulated in or credited to such accounts through purchases of selected merchandise made in person, through the mail, or electronically as by telephone or 2-way cable.
[0667] The printer described in the context of prize coupons and other forms of awards can also be directed by instructional signals to print messages and text unrelated to prizes. A coupon printer normally is limited to printing relatively short hard copy text, such as discount coupons or recipes sponsored by manufacturers of cooking or baking ingredients. However, modified printers are able to print larger hard copy suitable for news flashes, stock quotations, weather reports, sports results and the like. In such an event, individual printers are activated and controlled by instructional signals filtered to a user's printer through an addressable converter. Such a system can be used by a subscription service providing selected printed out information addressed to individual subscribers.
[0668]
[0669] A product selection is made by a shopper following the display at the shopper's location of alternative products available for purchase and upon the receipt of product information. The product information is provided in both visible and audible form by use of television equipment
[0670] The split screen display
[0671] A shopper can enter a request for a token on an identified product directly without awaiting the receipt of product information, or the shopper can first request product information for the purpose of acquainting himself or herself with the latest information available at said data storage facility. The information is made available by the interconnection of the data panel
[0672] The various entry devices
[0673] This arrangement permits the dispensers
[0674] A product display facility, constructed as shown above, can be dedicated, if desired, solely to the promotion of specific products by the displaying of the products available for sale, both wholesale and retail, without being a sales outlet. Such a facility can be designed and used for display purposes only, obviating large amounts of space normally required in a retail store. Being essentially an exhibiting facility, such a showroom can be planned and laid out for that specific purpose. Such a display facility permits, for example, stocking only two articles of each kind such as two bottles of an over-the-counter medicine or drug. One bottle displays the front and the other the back of the bottle. The resulting showroom and display facility can, therefore, be constructed with a relatively compact architecture.
[0675] If used for wholesale purposes, such a display facility can serve as a tool for the marketing by manufacturers, distributors, or wholesalers to retailers. In that event, as noted above, the product information is transmitted through coded signals via the addressable converters
[0676] For example, a purchasing manager may access the central information facility
[0677] Upon request of a shopper, whether the shopper be physically located within the display area, or whether the shopper call in from the remote location
[0678] By way of alternative embodiments, it is noted that the plurality of remote receiving stations
[0679]
[0680] Having polled the targeted group of respondents and having processed responses as described above, the resulting input by desired groupings of respondents can then be analyzed in any desired fashion. Different groupings can be cross-referenced or otherwise processed. The results are tabulated and stored or made available to sponsors for further analyses based on a sponsor's own interpretive guidelines. The software designed in connection with the above described polling or survey activities allow for the flexibility of individually programming circuitry to achieve selected ones or all of the state objectives.
[0681] With reference to both
[0682] The polling system
[0683] In operation, the formulating section is employed to set up the ground rules of the polling. The unit
[0684] With reference to
[0685] The procedure is to present the task and the contestants to the remote audience via television or radio. In the case of radio, each of the contestants would be interviewed to enable the remote audience to become acquainted with the various contestants prior to the selection process. Such interviewing may be done also in the case of a television transmission of proceedings in the studio
[0686] The responses of the contestants are evaluated, and may also be scored in those situations wherein the nature of the task will permit a scoring, such as a task requesting a listing of major rivers in the world. The results of the contestants' responses are posted in the studio
[0687] Alternatively, there may be a delay in the posting or displaying of the results of the contestants' responses, the delay being long enough to enable responses from members of the remote audience to the task. Such responses by the members of the remote audience can be made by way of the various equipments described hereinabove, such as by the response unit
[0688] In yet another variation of the present embodiment of the invention, the results of the selection, or prediction, of the winning contestant or contestants may be made available to the contestants before the contestants respond to the task at the studio
[0689] As shown in
[0690] The central evaluation unit
[0691] In the situation wherein the respondents at the remote stations
[0692] By way of alternative embodiments of this feature of the invention, It is noted that it may be desirable to give the respondents at the remote stations
[0693] It is noted also that members of the studio audience, or possibly observers of the studio proceedings, may be located in a viewing facility such as an observation booth or auditorium adjacent the studio, wherein the observers and members of the studio audience in the viewing facility can see proceedings in the studio either directly or via television monitors. The observers and members of the studio audience in the viewing facility may desire to participate in the selection or prediction of winning contestants as well as to be given the opportunity to respond to the tasks. It is to be understood that such observers and members of the studio audience are included within the class of respondents described herein. Such an arrangement may be implemented, with respect to the system
[0694]
[0695] Alternatively, in the event that the remote respondents are to provide responses to the task, then the answers of the studio contestants
[0696] This announcement is indicated by dashed line
[0697]
[0698] The recording and playback of situations involving the task and response to the task have been described hereinabove with reference to FIGS.
[0699] In both the case of the direct transmission of the signals from the studio
[0700] It is also understood that, in the operation of the communication link
[0701] By way of yet a further feature in the practice of the procedure of
[0702] In similar fashion, the members of the remote audience
[0703] With respect to a game-playing system, such as that disclosed in
[0704] Use of the system
[0705] The system
[0706] While not shown specifically in
[0707] In addition to the PIN number, players may receive additional identification such as a registered pass or wagering ticket. The data facility
[0708] An attempt by an unauthorized person to wager can be blocked by either the central station
[0709] The data storage facility
[0710] It is to be understood that the above described embodiments of the invention are illustrative only, and that modifications thereof may occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, this invention is not to be regarded as limited to the embodiments disclosed herein, but is to be limited only as defined by the appended claims.