David H. Shepard

For other people named David Shepard, see David Shepard (disambiguation).
David Hammond Shepard
Born (1923-09-30)September 30, 1923
Milwaukee
Died November 24, 2007(2007-11-24) (aged 84)
Nationality United States
Fields electrical engineering
Alma mater Cornell University
University of Michigan
Known for optical character recognition
speech recognition

David Hammond Shepard (September 30, 1923 November 24, 2007) was an American inventor, who invented among other things, the first optical character recognition device, first voice recognition system and the Farrington B numeric font used on credit cards.[1]

Life

Shepard was born September 30, 1923 in Milwaukee. His father died when he was 2 and his mother when he was 10. His guardian was Laurens Hammond who invented the Hammond organ.[1] He graduated in electrical engineering from Cornell in 1945 and then University of Michigan with a Masters degree in Mathematics in 1947.[2] He worked during World War II for the Armed Forces Security Agency (now National Security Agency) on cryptanalysis, breaking Japanese codes. His nickname was "D-Shep" and "Party Shep" After the war he built an optical character recognition device (reading machine) in his attic with Harvey Cook Jr. called "Gismo". In 1952 he formed Intelligent Machines Research Corporation to commercialize the invention with William Lawless Jr. in Arlington, Virginia.[3]

IBM licensed the machine, but never put it into production. Shepard designed the Farrington B numeric font now used on most credit cards. Recognition was more reliable on a simple and open font, to avoid the effects of smearing at gasoline station pumps. Reading credit cards was the first major industry use of OCR, although today the information is read magnetically from the back of the cards.

In 1962 Shepard founded Cognitronics Corporation. In 1964 his patented "Conversation Machine" was the first to provide telephone Interactive voice response access to computer stored data using speech recognition. The first words recognized were "yes" and "no".

Since the 1980s he worked on high altitude wind power, harnessing winds at high altitudes to generate power. He founded Sky WindPower Corporation with Australian Bryan William Roberts of the University of Sydney.[4] Shepard died in San Diego of bronchiectasis on November 24, 2007, at the age of 84.[1]

Patents

References

  1. 1 2 3 Douglas Martin (December 11, 2007). "David H. Shepard, 84, Dies; Optical Reader Inventor". New York Times. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  2. "San Diego News December 15, 2007 David H. Shepard obituary".
  3. "In Memoriam: David H. Shepard". The Institute. IEEE. March 7, 2008. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  4. "About Us". Sky WindPower Corporation web site. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
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